Interface of Law and Medicine in Clinical Legal Education: Success story of the Women’s Law Clinic in improving the health of women and ensuring women’s access to Justice in Nigeria
Author(s) -
Kevwe Omoragbon
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of clinical legal education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2056-3930
pISSN - 1467-1069
DOI - 10.19164/ijcle.v17i0.45
Subject(s) - health law , frontier , economic justice , law , legal education , scope (computer science) , medicine , service (business) , legal service , developing country , scope of practice , political science , family medicine , business , health care , health education , economic growth , international health , marketing , computer science , economics , programming language
Specialist law clinics now operate both in the developed and developing world. The historical background of these specialist law clinics can be traced to the United States. They also abound in South Africa, Europe and are fast emerging in several African countries. It is however outside the scope of this paper to describe the wide variety of specialist law clinic models that exist in other countries. At present in Nigeria, there are seven Nigerian Universities with law clinics. These law clinics in enhancing the social justice frontier have developed projects addressing specific problems; making them specialists in service delivery, but the Women’s Law Clinic, is the only gender specialist law clinic.
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