Abstract
As part of its ongoing process of curriculum development, the Department of Law at Carleton University decided in 1988 that a compulsory course in legal research methods was long overdue in the B.A. Honours degree in Law. Fortified with interest nurtured by methodological debates in feminist scholarship,' experience devilling' for a barrister pending my call to the bar, and practice from instructing a course in legal research and writing while a graduate student, I set about developing the proposed course. No guidelines existed for such a course, beyond the logic that it should complement the socio-legal or legal studies focus of the Department.' To the best of my knowledge, no precedents existed in Canada. 4 In this paper, I reflect upon my questions and discoveries in the design and teaching of the initial course.
Original language | Canadian English |
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Journal | Dalhousie Law Journal |
Issue number | 3.0 |
Publication status | Published - May 1 1992 |
Keywords
- legal research
- Carleston University
- legal education
- legal history
- Canada
- legal writing
Disciplines
- Legal Education
- Legal Writing and Research