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Coombs, Mary Irene – Journal of Legal Education, 1988
A law school teacher describes her response to the incorrect and insensitive treatment of rape in a criminal law textbook, including analysis and criticism of the text's content and communication with the publisher about it. (MSE)
Descriptors: Authors, Criminal Law, Feminism, Higher Education

Erickson, Nancy S. – Journal of Legal Education, 1988
A study of sex bias in law school course content found many topics of particular concern to women to be virtually absent from criminal law casebooks, despite growth in legal scholarship and public sensitivity. Casebook authors and law professors are urged to integrate these topics into the curriculum. (MSE)
Descriptors: Course Content, Criminal Law, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development

Zarr, Melvyn – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
A way is described to expose first-year law students to a whole case and thus to blend in appellate decisions, statutes, and scholarly articles as they might be discovered and used by the parties and the court. (MLW)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Criminal Law, Experiential Learning, Higher Education

Kurtz, Paul M. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
A study to examine the structure of the criminal justice curriculum in the American law school is described. An analysis of what courses are being offered, how many hours of classroom instruction are available, and when during the educational process the student is exposed to criminal law courses is provided. (MLW)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Criminal Law, Curriculum Design, Degree Requirements

Gildin, Gary S. – Journal of Legal Education, 1994
A trial advocacy professor who spent some time as an assistant public defender discusses the types of clients the criminal defense lawyer is likely to encounter and offers suggestions for training the advocate to address the problems posed by each defendant type. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Classification, Counselor Client Relationship, Courts

Bernstein, Anita – Journal of Legal Education, 1996
A seminar at Chicago-Kent College of Law (Illinois) that reviews six first-year law school courses by focusing on feminist issues in course content and structure is described. The seminar functions as both a review and a shift in perspective. Courses revisited include civil procedure, contracts, criminal law, justice and the legal system,…
Descriptors: Contracts, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Courts

Doyel, Robert L. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
A new course of clinical education at the University of Mississippi is described. A member of the teaching faculty was appointed under the Criminal Justice Act to represent indigent defendants with the assistance of student interns. Goals for the future and possible implementation at other law schools are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Descriptions, Criminal Law, Experiential Learning

Dominguez, David – Journal of Legal Education, 1994
This article proposes that cultural diversity in legal education should help all students to reexamine their limited perceptions of justice. "Negotiable learning" (multicultural negotiation between groups of students) teaches students how to work through forms of bigotry. The approach is applied to teaching of criminal law, labor law, and public…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Bias, Competition, Conflict Resolution