MARSON, James, FERRIS, Katy and KAWALEK, Anna (2019). A vineyard in a law clinic: the practical application of a therapeutic jurisprudence philosophy in a UK law clinic. Singapore Journal of Legal Studies, 124, 124-146. [Article]
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Marson_vineyard_law_clinic(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
In late 2015, the British Red Cross approached the lead author. It was increasingly evident
that given the austerity-driven political agenda of the UK government in cutting public
funding to advisory services, coupled with the developing refugee crisis and its impact on
countries and regions, refugees in many parts of the UK were in need of legal and non-legal
assistance. University law clinics were an obvious source of support given their objectives of
developing students’ understanding and engagement with community groups. As our law
clinic, based in the Helena Kennedy Centre for International Justice (HKC), was developed
specifically to address the needs of groups such as refugees, and given the ground-breaking
work of Wexler and Winick (in Therapeutic Jurisprudence) and Gould and Perlin (on its
application to clinical legal education) on providing a therapeutically positive experience for
users, we sought to base our clinic aligned with Therapeutic Jurisprudence (TJ) principles.
This paper examines the development and practical operation of a law clinic from a TJ
perspective. It discusses how we have sought to infuse its core values, style and techniques,
underpinned by humanitarian philosophies, into Clinical Legal Education (and as a starting
point for its legal pedagogy). To date, most papers in this area have examined criminal law
clinics in the US, but this paper is made unique by its focus upon the linkage between TJ and
refugees against the UK contextual backdrop.
As both frameworks strive towards achieving the same objectives (social justice and human
rights), the close alignment between TJ and the HKC has allowed the Clinic (and its
students) to learn from TJ as a rich and broad school of enquiry. This is particularly
important when considering recent political UK initiatives keen to promote/incorporate
comprehensive law practices into law processes more readily. As such, the ideas that TJ
exhorts are becoming an increasingly important skills-base for graduates, particularly for
those students who will become the next generation of lawyers/advisors, and must therefore
also be incorporated into global legal education.
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