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Legal Education & Public Interest Lawyering in East Africa: The Role of University –based Law Clinics Feb.5-6, 2014 Kampala, Uganda
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Development of CLE: 1960’s- 1970’s (US) Idea borrowed from medical field—good pedagogical tool Conducive environment/social factors—rights movement Clinics mostly related to social justice objectives & challenging status quo Institutional support from American Bar Association—student practice rules; accreditation (pushing for CLE at law schools) Institutional/Uni support to make CLE part of the law school curriculum Trend spreads to the Americas & Africa –models & focus shaped by context social factors & needs in the regions
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Walk-in legal aid clinics :widely across Africa, Americas; support to indigent; good exposure for students to live cases & clients; engage students in client representation; ethical dilemmas; honing of legal research & writing skills; responsibility for another human being; attention to the client. Clinic course (with simulations): no live cases, purely pedagogical tool & not service oriented. Main goal-teaching legal skills through simulation. Volunteer/Student-led clinics: not part of the curriculum, student-led initiatives that focus on engaging communities- legal assistance, referrals, legal empowerment. Thematic specific clinics: tax, intellectual property, women, children, domestic violence, immigration, PwD, Human Rights, small business. (US-well funded CLE) Street law/community law model: students visiting schools/communities to teach about the law, constitutional rights. Legal empowerment focused! Strategic litigation clinics (public interest): focus on achieving fundamental legal, institutional reforms and tackling structural issues perpetuating human rights or constitutional rights violations at national or regional levels.
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Accredited course- part of law school curriculum (elective) Clinic seminar –teaching skills on legal representation, client- centredness, legal research & writing, trial advocacy, simulations, class discussion of cases & ethical issues; Live cases/projects assigned to student teams-full responsibility to handle cases & projects with minimal staff oversight; -cases address wide range of international human rights issues; Supervision by clinic staff—close supervision to mentor students on client representation and making court submissions; Student exposure: --Exposure to live international human rights issues, jurisprudence, socio- economic and political context in other countries; --Exposure to using the law as a tool for social change & legal or institutional reform --Generating student interest & commitment to human rights law practice --Enables ‘student agency’ in playing an active part in fundamental reforms Fora: Regional and International Courts/Mechanisms targeted (ie: Inter-American Commission on Human Rights; UN mechanisms);
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Strong emphasis on pedagogy- CLE as a tool to impart legal skills Legal aid clinics- service oriented; expose students to needs/rights of indigent Specialized clinics- specific thematic focus clinics Human rights clinic model- first developed in the US & spread to the Americas Enabling factors: Social context—1960’s rights movement; interest in social justice & human rights Support by ABA—CLE becomes part of law school curricula; accreditation raises CLE profile Student practice rules enables students to litigate cases w/ staff supervision Additional institutional support- CLEA; clinical conferences & networks, funders w/ CLE interest Accreditation has made it easier to secure funds from core university budget Interest in practical approach to teaching law in US (no mandatory internship reqm’t)
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Legal services model predominate in Africa—influenced by social context!! Majority of universities in Africa with law departments/schools have a law clinic. With exception of SA & Nigeria, boasting clinics in most of the law schools across the 2 countries; most other countries may have established clinics only in the leading or main universities; CLE still not widespread across the region. Some have yet to establish a university-based law clinic as such. Factors affecting development of predominant CLE in Africa: SOCIAL CONTEXT --access to justice focus/meeting overwhelming demand for services by indigent communities --filling the gap left by State -focus on professional training – “learning by doing” -weak funding sources—limited university budgets; -not focused on changing status quo or generating fundamental legal reforms Exception: SA –strong institutional support-State sponsors/supports university-based law clinics- recognize role in promoting access to justice and complementing State duty to provide legal services Recent trend- specialized clinics--example: HIV clinics & PwD clinics (external support) No human rights or strategic litigation clinic model in the region—trend has not developed as yet. Why not?? Limited political space to challenge gov’t action; limitations on student practice in court; formalistic law curriculum w/ focus on theory or commercial law?
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Student exposure: expose students to public interest law, human rights and social justice issues Skills building: Hands-on experience with live cases & projects (critical legal analysis skills; human rights fact-finding and documentation; legal research & writing; advocacy skills; strategic lawyering skills; public speaking & presentation skills) Agents of change: placing students at center of social change actions; students become players in fundamental legal & intuitional reforms Professional training: placements w/ human rights NGOs (w/ supervision) hones professional skills Commitment to public interest/human rights law- training a new generation of public interest lawyer; lawyers socially conscious and aware of civic duties to their community. Bridging the gap between theory & practice: applying human rights law to real-life contexts & cases; students learn to appreciate and respond to complex socio-legal issues in context! Learning in context: students exposed to topical issues and learn to address them through interactions with local human rights experts, advocates & activists; not purely theoretical learning.
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Securing funding (weak university support/financing); must compete for funds from external donors Limited political space to allow for HR clinics challenging status quo Formalistic law curricula w/ little appreciation of the human rights clinic model Limitations on student practice in courts National judicial system/judiciary rigidity/formalism
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