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Join us for the Global Legal Skills Conference to explore the importance of global legal skills for students. Learn from international experts in various legal areas and discover how to enhance teaching methods in legal education. Get insights on legal research, advocacy, professional responsibility, and adaptation to diverse legal systems.
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Global Legal Skills Conference III Mark E. Wojcik The John Marshall Law School, Chicago Facultad Libre de Derecho de Monterrey, Mexico
Global Legal Skills Conference • Why are we here? • A conference snapshot • Looking ahead
1. Why are we here? What are “Global Legal Skills”? Why are we having a Global Legal Skills Conference?
What are “Global Legal Skills”? • Reading • Writing • Correspondence • Memoranda • Contracts • Listening • Speaking • Note-Taking • Legal Research • Presentations • Negotiation • Advocacy • Trial advocacy • Appellate advocacy • Alternative Dispute Resolution • Professional Responsibility • Thinking • Learning
Why Have a GLS Conference? • What are we learning here? • Will it show up in our teaching? • Will it show up in what our students learn? • Do we teach our students what they need to learn? • Do we even know the needs of our students? • How can we know the answers to any of these questions?
Global Legal Skills III A snapshot of the conference
Global Legal Skills III • First conference logo (created by FLDM)
Global Legal Skills Conferences • GLS I (Chicago 2005) • 60+/- attendees • First conference (not much publicity) • GLS II (Chicago 2007) • 120+/- attendees • Larger international audience • GLS III (Mexico 2008) • 170+/- attendees • First conference outside U.S. • First panels not in English
Presenters from 40+ U.S. Law Schools • Albany Law School • American University-Washington College of Law • Arizona State University • Boston University • Chicago-Kent College of Law • Cleveland-Marshall College of Law (Ohio) • Drexel University (Pennsylvania) • Florida International University • Franklin Pierce Law Center (New Hampshire) • Georgetown University Law Center • Harvard Law School • Indiana University-Indianapolis • The John Marshall Law School-Chicago • John Marshall Law School-Atlanta • Michigan State University • Northwestern University (Illinois) • Nova Southeastern University (Florida) • Rutgers University-Camden (New Jersey) • St. John’s University (New York) • Santa Clara University (California) • Seattle University • South Texas College of Law • Stanford Law School (California) • Stetson University (California) • Temple University (Pennsylvania) • Texas Tech University • University of Akron (Ohi0) • University of Denver (Colorado) • University of Illinois • University of Michigan • University of Missouri • University of North Dakota • University of Oregon • University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law (California) • University of Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) • University of Southern California • University of Wisconsin • Villanova University • Washington University (St. Louis) • William Mitchell College of Law (Minnesota)
Presenters from 8 Other Countries • Mexico • FacultadLibre de Derecho de Monterrey • Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon • Universidad Iberamericana Puebla • Escuela Judicial (Consejo de la Judicatura del Poder Judicial del Estado de Nuevo Leon) • Escuela Judicial del Poder Judicial Federal • China: China University of Political Science and Law • Chile: ESE:O • Dominican Republic: EscuelaNacional de la Judicatura • Japan: Ritsumeikan University and Kansai University • Kenya: Moi University • Spain: Instituto de Empressa Law School • Switzerland: University of Lucerne
16 Countries Represented in the International Planning Committee • Argentina • Belarus • Brazil • Canada • China • France • Germany • Japan • Mexico • Singapore • Spain • Sri Lanka • Switzerland • Turkey • United Kingdom • United States
3. Looking Ahead Publications Future conferences Creating a professional association
Capturing “Best Practices” • Book with summaries of conference presentations and papers (from the first three conferences) • Resource for future work • Publisher (Van der Plus Publishing) • Working Title: International Legal Education: The Best Theory and Practice – Summaries from the Global Legal Skills Conferences
Global Legal Skills Conference IV • Washington, D.C. • Georgetown University Law Center • June 2009
Global Legal Skills Conference IV • Program submission process will be more focused (easier for participants) • Defined program tracks • Interest group meetings • International Planning Committee will be more active and involved • Craig and Peter need your help NOW
Global Legal Skills Conference V • Planned for a location in Asia • Host country still to be determined • Conference may focus on needs of Legal English in Asia
Make no small plans! Makenosmallplans. They have no magic to stir humanity’s blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Makebig plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical plan once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency. Remember that our sons and daughters are going to do things that will stagger us. Let your watchword be order and your beacon, beauty. Think big.
Global Legal Skills Conference V Another alternative – return to Monterrey in February 2010 Also hold a conference in Asia (where focus would be on needs of Asia) Could also hold a regional conference in Europe Also hold a student conference
Global Legal Skills Association • An international, professional association • Law professors • ESL (ESP) professors • Researchers • Writers • Legal translators • Others • Conferences • Newsletters / Publications • Other meetings / events