Legal Experimentalism - LAWS2384
Faculty: Faculty of Law
School: Faculty of Law
Course Outline: See below
Campus: Sydney
Career: Undergraduate
Units of Credit: 6
EFTSL: 0.12500 (more info)
Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 5
Enrolment Requirements:
Pre-requisite: 24 UOC completed in LLB courses or 24 UOC completed in Juris Doctor courses. Juris Doctor students who commenced prior to 2013 need no pre-requisites.
Equivalent: JURD7284, JURD7784, LAWS3384
Excluded: LAWS2320, LAWS2326, LAWS2820
CSS Contribution Charge: 1 (more info)
Tuition Fee: See Tuition Fee Schedule
Further Information: See Class Timetable
View course information for previous years.
Description
The Legal Experimentalism course aims to equip law students to employ legal skills and knowledge in innovative, creative ways. The course will do so by combining two main elements. First, it offers students a firm grounding in the legal traditions of Legal Realism and their contemporary derivations. Second, it affords students opportunities to engage collaboratively in the creative rewriting and redeployment of legal instruments, texts and institutions and/or to start to think through the potential development of new legal technologies and institutions.
Topics Covered/Structure
- Precursors and Contexts: Legal and Philosophical Pragmatism; Sociological Jurisprudence
- American Legal Realism
- Realism Worldwide: Comparable or Related Developments in Australia and other Jurisdictions
- Design Exercise I: Identifying the Elements and Scope
- Ramifications of Realism: Law and Economics, Law and Society, other ‘Law and…’ movements
- Design Exercise II: Taking Apart the Elements
- New Realism; New Governance
- Design Exercise III: The Why and What For, the Problem, the Challenge
- Democratic Experimentalism
- Design Exercise IV: Reassembling the Elements
- Offshoots and derivations: de Sousa Santos’ ALICE Project; New Empiricism in Law etc.
- Group Presentations