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Originally an unpublished paper presented at the Clinical Theory Workshop at the Columbia Law School, UCLA/IALS Conference on
"Problem Solving in Clinical Education" Spring 2001 by a York University Osgood Hall Law researcher, Imai Shin. Later cited in the Clinical Law Review by New York University School of Law.

An important component of lawyering for social justice is working in communities. In addition to conventional skills, such as legal analysis and litigation, community-based lawyers need skills not taught in the mainstream curriculum. This article describes a counter-pedagogy for teaching students three core skills for community lawyering: how to collaborate with members of the community; how to acknowledge personal identity, race and emotion; and how to take a community perspective on legal problems. The author argues that these skills cannot be taught in isolation, but should be integrated into the teaching itself, including the teaching of substantive areas of the law. He suggests, for example, that students are more likely to learn how to collaborate if the entire clinical course is based on a collaborative approach, rather than having a special class dedicated to "collaboration." The article includes descriptions of techniques and exercises used at Osgoode Hall Law School in the Intensive Programme on Poverty Law at Parkdale Community Legal Services and in the Intensive Programme in Aboriginal Lands, Resources and Governments. (Abstract: Clinical Legal Education Association: http://www.cleaweb.org/resources/abstracts/fall02.html)
Journal
2002
9
1
195
New York
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