Posts Tagged ‘Technology in clinical legal education’

Resources for SubTech 2012: International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice

July 28, 2012

Here are resources related to SubTech 2012: International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice, being held 26-28 July 2012 at New York Law School, in New York, New York, USA.

Click here for the conference Website.

Click here for the conference program.

The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #subtech2012.

Click here for archived Twitter tweets from the conference — in .csv format.

Click here for a livestream of tweets from the conference (HT @reneeknake).

Here are posts and other resources related to the conference:

SubTech 2012: International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice

July 27, 2012

SubTech 2012: International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice, is being held 26-28 July 2012 at New York Law School, in New York, New York, USA.

Click here for the conference Website.

The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #subtech2012.

Click here for a livestream of tweets from the conference (HT @reneeknake).

The complete conference program does not appear to be available.

Felker: Demonstration Project of Interoperability between UC Digital Law Libraries and Legal Clinical Training Opportunities based in California County Law Libraries

February 1, 2010

Christopher D. Felker, Esq., of the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, Boalt Hall, has posted Demonstration Project of Interoperability between UC Digital Law Libraries and Legal Clinical Training Opportunities based in California County Law Libraries (Dec. 2009). Here is the abstract:

David A. Greenbaum, then Director, Interactive University Project, UC Berkeley provided the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation with a report of work undertaken by UC Berkeley, Indiana University, Stanford University, and the UC California Digital Library to plan a demonstration project of digital library and educational technology interoperability.

The work on which that report was based was conducted from August to September 2004 with the generous support of a $12,000 Officer’s Grant.

This proposal revisits some of the core concepts outlined in that preliminary work and suggests a demonstration project wherein a UC-based digital law library partners with an existing County Law Library to offer legal clinical education and training. For discussion purposes only, the present proposal posits a relationship between the Hugh and Hazel Darling Law Library at UCLA Law and the LA Law Library. In reality, productive public university – public agency partnerships could be formed at any UC Law School (UC Berkeley – Alameda County; UC Irvine – Orange County; UC Hastings – San Francisco County; UC Davis – Yolo / Sacramento County). The fullest realization would be to leverage a common digital library platform to offer clinical training on ‘retail’ level legal problems which many patrons of the county law library must confront on a pro se footing (bankruptcy, foreclosure, divorce separation in both marital and domestic partnership arrangements and the formation of sole proprietorship or limited liability businesses).


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 97 other followers

%d bloggers like this: