Cover image for Design in legal education
Design in legal education
Title:
Design in legal education
Author:
Allbon, Emily, editor.
ISBN:
9780367075798
Physical Description:
xiv, 254 pages ; illustrations ; 24 cm.
Series:
Emerging legal education

Emerging legal education.
Contents:
1. What can design do for legal education? -- 2. Socio-legal methods labs as pedagogical spaces: Experimentation, knowledge building, community development -- 3. Using personas, vignettes and diagrams in legal education -- 4. Objects and visual devices in teaching for peace in Colombia: Narrowing the gaps between social sciences and law -- 5. Psychologically-informed design in legal education -- 6. Service design comes to Blackstone's tower: applying design thinking to curriculum development in legal education -- 7. Teaching innovation in the age of technology: educating lawyers for digital disruption using visually-oriented legal design principles -- 8. Teaching IT law through the lens of legal design -- 9. Making a racism reporting tool: a legal design case study -- 10. Teaching comic book contracting -- 11. Using human-centred design to break down barriers to legal participation -- 12. Judging by appearances -- 13. Designing to dismantle -- 14. Taking a co-design workshop online -- 15. Designing access to the law: an ethical perspective -- 16. Visualisation in contract education and practice: the first 15 years -- 17. How legal design is shaping satisfaction, standards and substance in legal practice -- 18. Design in legal publishing -- 19. Lawyers are still lawyers. Except when they're not.
Abstract:
This visually rich, experience-led collection explores what design can do for legal education. In recent decades design has increasingly come to be understood as a resource to improve other fields of public, private and civil society practice; and legal design--that is, the application of design-based methods to legal practice--is increasingly embedded in lawyering across the world. It brings together experts from multiple disciplines, professions and jurisdictions to reflect upon how designerly mindsets, processes and strategies can enhance teaching and learning across higher education, public legal information and legal practice; and will be of interest and use to those teaching and learning in any and all of those fields.