The Italian legal clinics movement: Data and prospects
Author(s) -
Clelia Bartoli
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of clinical legal education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2056-3930
pISSN - 1467-1069
DOI - 10.19164/ijcle.v22i2.427
Subject(s) - legal education , order (exchange) , law , movement (music) , political science , process (computing) , sociology , philosophy , aesthetics , business , computer science , finance , operating system
It is not more than 5 years since legal clinics were founded in Italian Universities: a very recent history indeed and similar to that of other Western European countries. I will try to explain this through some data collected by an inquiry that I ran in order to have a more detailed map of this phenomena and to conjecture its future evolution. In the following paragraphs I will present the data inquiry and I will try to explain the process of establishing the Italian movement for legal education, its options and challenges. It is worth pointing out why I use the term “movement”. What is going on in Italy, and I think elsewhere, is not simply the proliferation of single clinics, but the emergence of a new wave in academia. On the basis of the clinician idea and history, Italian scholars involved in this process are formulating a different way to teach law, and a different view of law too. I think it is not by chance that many of the pioneers of clinical education have a philosophical background or a highly speculative approach. It would seem strange that such a practical teaching style is promoted by the most theoretical part of the law faculty staff. The reason for this is probably that the clinician approach needs a paradigm shift through a more realistic, critical and socially committed conception of law.
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