Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu

Miyamoto Musashi was a master Japanese swordsman. His text, the Book of Five Rings, sets out his philosophy on combat and the way of the warrior. This article takes his teachings and applies them to art of trial advocacy. The Five Scrolls of Musashi’s text allow for an engagement with the fundamenta...

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Main Author: Chris Dent
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bond University 2023-05-01
Series:Legal Education Review
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.75395
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author Chris Dent
author_facet Chris Dent
author_sort Chris Dent
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description Miyamoto Musashi was a master Japanese swordsman. His text, the Book of Five Rings, sets out his philosophy on combat and the way of the warrior. This article takes his teachings and applies them to art of trial advocacy. The Five Scrolls of Musashi’s text allow for an engagement with the fundamental importance of preparation, the effective deployment of law and fact, awareness and professional ethics. The connections are made through the use of current experts in advocacy, including Glissan and Hampel. The use of techniques involving katana is, of course, only a metaphor – one aimed at getting law students to think of trials in a more life-or-death way. Advocacy is not the showiness of TV, but the hard grind of training and preparation that was the life of a ronin.
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spelling doaj-art-8b924a8a22244654a5ca5ab89985fc432025-08-20T03:22:29ZengBond UniversityLegal Education Review1033-28391839-37132023-05-0133110.53300/001c.75395Trial Advocacy and NitojutsuChris DentMiyamoto Musashi was a master Japanese swordsman. His text, the Book of Five Rings, sets out his philosophy on combat and the way of the warrior. This article takes his teachings and applies them to art of trial advocacy. The Five Scrolls of Musashi’s text allow for an engagement with the fundamental importance of preparation, the effective deployment of law and fact, awareness and professional ethics. The connections are made through the use of current experts in advocacy, including Glissan and Hampel. The use of techniques involving katana is, of course, only a metaphor – one aimed at getting law students to think of trials in a more life-or-death way. Advocacy is not the showiness of TV, but the hard grind of training and preparation that was the life of a ronin.https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.75395
spellingShingle Chris Dent
Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
Legal Education Review
title Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
title_full Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
title_fullStr Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
title_full_unstemmed Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
title_short Trial Advocacy and Nitojutsu
title_sort trial advocacy and nitojutsu
url https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.75395
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