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5. Conservatives, Nationalists, and American Romantics Debating Legal Education in Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana
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John Harrington
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Foundation Stories
- 1. The Proliferation and Transformation of Harvard’s Case Method in the United States, 1870s– 1990s 17
- 2. How America Did (and Didn’t) Influence English Legal Education, circa 1870– 1965 39
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Part 2: Americanization— Critical Histories
- 3. American Influences, Canadian Realities 67
- 4. Functionalism, Legal Process, and the Transformation (and Subordination) of Australian Law Schools 92
- 5. Conservatives, Nationalists, and American Romantics Debating Legal Education in Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana 115
- 6. Transplantation and Domestication of American Models of Legal Education in Nigeria 139
- 7. Model, System, or Node? 162
- 8. Transplants in Estonian Legal Education 189
- 9. “The Turn to the West” 209
- 10. The American Case Method and New Japanese Legal Education 225
- 11. Legal Education in France Turns Its Attention to the Harvard Model 243
- 12. American Moment(s) 258
- 13. Catalytic Agents? 288
- 14. Legal Teaching and the Reconceptualizing of the State 310
- 15. Socratic Method, Philippine- style 327
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Part 3: US Perspectives
- 16. Rethinking Assumptions about the Global Influence of US Legal Education 353
- 17. The Harvard Models in Their Native Habitat and Abroad 370
- Acknowledgments 383
- About the Contributors 385
- Index 395
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Foundation Stories
- 1. The Proliferation and Transformation of Harvard’s Case Method in the United States, 1870s– 1990s 17
- 2. How America Did (and Didn’t) Influence English Legal Education, circa 1870– 1965 39
-
Part 2: Americanization— Critical Histories
- 3. American Influences, Canadian Realities 67
- 4. Functionalism, Legal Process, and the Transformation (and Subordination) of Australian Law Schools 92
- 5. Conservatives, Nationalists, and American Romantics Debating Legal Education in Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana 115
- 6. Transplantation and Domestication of American Models of Legal Education in Nigeria 139
- 7. Model, System, or Node? 162
- 8. Transplants in Estonian Legal Education 189
- 9. “The Turn to the West” 209
- 10. The American Case Method and New Japanese Legal Education 225
- 11. Legal Education in France Turns Its Attention to the Harvard Model 243
- 12. American Moment(s) 258
- 13. Catalytic Agents? 288
- 14. Legal Teaching and the Reconceptualizing of the State 310
- 15. Socratic Method, Philippine- style 327
-
Part 3: US Perspectives
- 16. Rethinking Assumptions about the Global Influence of US Legal Education 353
- 17. The Harvard Models in Their Native Habitat and Abroad 370
- Acknowledgments 383
- About the Contributors 385
- Index 395