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Clinical legal education and human rights values: a universal pro forma for law clinics

Clinical legal education and human rights values: a universal pro forma for law clinics
Clinical legal education and human rights values: a universal pro forma for law clinics
This article explores the theoretical foundations for a social justice–centric global law clinic movement. Our starting position is that law clinics, a type of clinical legal education (CLE), are in a unique position to engage in, and potentially promote, social justice issues outside their immediate communities and jurisdictions. To achieve this aim, it is necessary for law clinics to adopt a universal pro forma underpinned by the key concepts of CLE, namely social justice education and promoting access to justice through law reform. We argue that the main features of CLE are aligned with those of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) on issues such as human dignity and social justice. Incorporating UDHR values into CLE serves three purposes. First, it acts as a universal pro forma, which facilitates communication between clinics across jurisdictions, irrespective of their cultural or legal background. Second, it allows clinics to identify sources of global injustices and to share resources and expertise to collectively address injustices. Third, the theoretical approach advocated in this article argues that clinics have a Kantian moral right to engage in transnational law reform.
Human rights lawyers, Kant, social justice, Education, Access to Justice
2322-0058
23-35
Madhloom, Omar
50eccbe7-bad0-48de-a1da-a4fa995f695e
Antonopoulos, Irene
65ac3024-75c9-474d-9e14-223ddfdaee1b
Madhloom, Omar
50eccbe7-bad0-48de-a1da-a4fa995f695e
Antonopoulos, Irene
65ac3024-75c9-474d-9e14-223ddfdaee1b

Madhloom, Omar and Antonopoulos, Irene (2021) Clinical legal education and human rights values: a universal pro forma for law clinics. Asian Journal of Legal eductaion, 9 (1), 23-35, [12]. (doi:10.1177/23220058211051031).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article explores the theoretical foundations for a social justice–centric global law clinic movement. Our starting position is that law clinics, a type of clinical legal education (CLE), are in a unique position to engage in, and potentially promote, social justice issues outside their immediate communities and jurisdictions. To achieve this aim, it is necessary for law clinics to adopt a universal pro forma underpinned by the key concepts of CLE, namely social justice education and promoting access to justice through law reform. We argue that the main features of CLE are aligned with those of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) on issues such as human dignity and social justice. Incorporating UDHR values into CLE serves three purposes. First, it acts as a universal pro forma, which facilitates communication between clinics across jurisdictions, irrespective of their cultural or legal background. Second, it allows clinics to identify sources of global injustices and to share resources and expertise to collectively address injustices. Third, the theoretical approach advocated in this article argues that clinics have a Kantian moral right to engage in transnational law reform.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 October 2021
Keywords: Human rights lawyers, Kant, social justice, Education, Access to Justice

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 482358
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482358
ISSN: 2322-0058
PURE UUID: 18546628-3daf-46b6-af94-bf85e32cb384
ORCID for Omar Madhloom: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2774-8778

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Date deposited: 27 Sep 2023 17:04
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:13

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Contributors

Author: Omar Madhloom ORCID iD
Author: Irene Antonopoulos

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