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Teaching and inculcating (decolonised) legal skills in the LLB curriculum at the University of Pretoria?
Author(s) -
Anton Kok,
Michelle Oelofse
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of decolonising disicplines
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2664-3405
pISSN - 2664-3308
DOI - 10.35293/jdd.v2i1.37
Subject(s) - curriculum , legal education , argument (complex analysis) , sociology , curriculum theory , jurisprudence , mathematics education , engineering ethics , law , pedagogy , political science , curriculum development , engineering , psychology , chemistry , biochemistry
‘Legal Skills’ was taught as a standalone first-year module in the LLB curriculum at the University of Pretoria from 1998 to 2012. In the 2013 curriculum, the teaching and inculcation of legal skills were integrated into a first-year “Jurisprudence” module. The 2015/6 student protests at the University of Pretoria led to the creation of three ‘transformation work streams’, one of which was tasked with curriculum transformation. The activities of the curriculum transformation work stream led to the adoption by the Senate of a Curriculum Transformation Framework Document (CTFD). All faculties have been asked to reconsider and fundamentally reshape their curricula with reference to the CTFD. This reflection-on-the-curriculum process at the Faculty of Law has arguably been dominated by an over-emphasis on the place and sequencing of modules instead of an overhaul of the content of law modules and the approach with which teaching should take place. There has also been a concerted push from some quarters in the Faculty to reintroduce a standalone Legal Skills module, rationalised by an argument along the lines of ‘legal skills cannot be transformed’ (never mind ‘decolonised’). In this article we will consider what it could mean to ask for the decolonising of the teaching and inculcation of legal skills in an LLB curriculum.

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