Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Planning Law:
A Practitioner's
Handbook 2nd ed




 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Corporate Insolvency Practice:
Litigation, Procedure
and Precedents 3rd ed




 Mark Watson-Gandy


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Research Handbook on Global Legal Education

Edited by: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, Bryant G. Garth

ISBN13: 9781788117005
To be Published: August 2026
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £230.00





This authoritative Research Handbook examines legal training and its impact on law and society. Leading experts adopt a kaleidoscope perspective to compare diverse country case studies, highlighting shifting patterns rather than a single model of ‘global’ legal education.

Contributors explore how legal education remains nationalised via local histories, politics and markets, despite borrowing models and language from modern, merit-based, or global approaches. Chapters assess the appearance of law schools as powerful sites where divisions of class, race, gender, empire and prestige are reproduced, contested and sometimes reimagined. The Research Handbook demonstrates how familiar patterns of hierarchies, inequalities and Western-centric ideals travel widely alongside diverse efforts in majority world contexts to resist, revisit and reimagine fairer institutions. Combining doctrinal analysis, institutional histories, archives, interviews and fieldwork, this Research Handbook advances research and promotes further study.

The Research Handbook is a crucial resource for legal education scholars and practitioners and also global scholars of the legal profession. It is prime reading for students and scholars of law and society and comparative institutions seeking more information on the factors shaping the legal landscape today.

Subjects:
Legal Skills and Method
Contents:
Introduction: a kaleidoscopic invitation to consider global legal education 1
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen and Bryant G. Garth

PART I COMPARATIVE COLONIAL AND COSMOPOLITAN CAPITALS
Introduction to Part I
1. Legal education with a socio-linguistic mission: teaching the Canadian common law in French at Université de Moncton 11
Adrien Habermacher
2. “Enroll and stay alive”: legal education in Colombia from a comparative perspective 26
Maria Adelaida Ceballos-Bedoya and Mauricio García-Villegas
3. Global legal education in Scotland: reflections from the global law LLB at Edinburgh Law School 46
Deval Desai and Gail Lythgoe
4. The corporatization of universities and unions as agents of resistance 61
Priya S. Gupta

PART II NEOLIBERAL ACCESS AND OPPORTUNITY
Introduction to Part II
Bryant G. Garth and Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen
5. Legal education in Russia: social disparities, market changes and post-Soviet legacy 87
Timur Bocharov and Aryna Dzmitryieva
6. Navigating growth: the challenges of maintaining legal education quality in India’s expanding law schools 105
Rahela Khorakiwala and Daksh Saroha
7. Mexico: some data to calm anxiety about the growth of law schools 127
Sergio Iván Anzola Rodríguez and Luis Alfonso Mora Ruenes
8. Community legal education and our duty to dream 139
Antonio M. Coronado, Cayley Balser, Gabriela Elizondo-Craig, Shannon S. Hayes, Abigael McGuire and Marisol Rodriguez-Cruz

PART III GLOBALIZATION AS PROCESS AND REPRODUCTION
Introduction to Part III
Bryant G. Garth and Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen
9. “Like whom, mom?” Structural inequalities in Brazilian law schools 160
Daniel Freitas Nunes and Fabio de Sá e Silva
10. From reform to reinforcement: bar-exam meritocracy, elite capacity, and gender education at Japanese law schools 185
Ayako Hirata
11. Internationalization in the Korean law school system: its demand and structural barriers 199
Jae-Hyup Lee and Jisuk Woo
12. Comparative law and society as Asian legal studies: the view from Australian law schools 222
Melissa Crouch
13. International student diasporas in global legal education 239
Carole Silver and Ritika Giri

PART IV CURRICULUM INTERVENTIONS
Introduction to Part IV
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen and Bryant G. Garth
14. Ethics and legal education in Latin America 278
Juny Montoya Vargas and Carlos F. Morales de Setién Ravina
15. Mainstreaming climate change in global legal education 297
Julia Dehm and Zoe Nay
16. Race and indigeneity and the law as “required reading”: can curricular reform lead to greater access to justice for all? 319
Cindy Thomas Archer
17. Forward from Kirksey v. Kirksey: slavery, legal education and the doctrine of consideration 339
Justin Simard
18. What is the goal of student pro bono? Public service values and the emotions 351
Helena Whalen-Bridge
19. Reimagining legal education at the dawn of artificial legal intelligence: Toward a human-centered hybrid 366
John Bliss

PART V LOOKING FOR LAW AND/IN SOCIAL CHANGE
Introduction to Part V
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen and Bryant G. Garth
20. Critical curriculum design 381
Rachel López
21. Prefigurative legal education 398
Sameer M. Ashar
22. Remaking South African legal education: the state, the legal profession and student activism 419
Ralph Madlalate
Conclusion: a kaleidoscopic view of global legal education 437