A Community of Procedure Scholars: Teaching Procedure and the Legal Academy

Elizabeth Thornburg, Erik S Knutsen, Carla Crifo', Camille Cameron

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    This article asks whether the way in which procedure is taught has an impact on the extent and accomplishments of a scholarly community of proceduralists. Not surprisingly, we find a strong correlation between the placement of procedure as a required course in an academic context and the resulting body of scholars and scholarship. Those countries in which more civil procedure is taught as part of a university degree — and in which procedure is recognized as a legitimate academic subject — have larger scholarly communities, a larger and broader corpus of works analyzing procedural issues, and a richer web of institutional support systems that inspire, fund, and shape the study of public justice.

    Original languageCanadian English
    JournalArticles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2013

    Keywords

    • civil procedure
    • legal education
    • teaching
    • scholarship
    • comparative law
    • institutional support systems
    • public justice

    Disciplines

    • Civil Procedure
    • Comparative and Foreign Law
    • Law
    • Legal Education

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