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This article poses an unjust case problem and proceeds to demonstrate how case problems often do not give students a chance to question unjust, immoral or outdated laws. By asking students to merely spot and apply the law, the typical case problem silences a student’s dissenting views and prevents s...

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Main Author: Kate Galloway
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bond University 2017-01-01
Series:Legal Education Review
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6106
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author Kate Galloway
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collection DOAJ
description This article poses an unjust case problem and proceeds to demonstrate how case problems often do not give students a chance to question unjust, immoral or outdated laws. By asking students to merely spot and apply the law, the typical case problem silences a student’s dissenting views and prevents students from questioning the impact of the law they learn on their society. Instead, students are trained to perceive the law as a static science built on the internal logic of precedent without any extrinsic justification.
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spelling doaj-art-b1b6cdc69b3d489381bf82f41d128f592025-08-20T03:22:29ZengBond UniversityLegal Education Review1033-28391839-37132017-01-0127110.53300/001c.6106ForewordKate GallowayThis article poses an unjust case problem and proceeds to demonstrate how case problems often do not give students a chance to question unjust, immoral or outdated laws. By asking students to merely spot and apply the law, the typical case problem silences a student’s dissenting views and prevents students from questioning the impact of the law they learn on their society. Instead, students are trained to perceive the law as a static science built on the internal logic of precedent without any extrinsic justification.https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6106
spellingShingle Kate Galloway
Foreword
Legal Education Review
title Foreword
title_full Foreword
title_fullStr Foreword
title_full_unstemmed Foreword
title_short Foreword
title_sort foreword
url https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6106
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