Do Law Clinics Need Trigger Warnings? Philosophical, Pedagogical and Practical Concerns

IF 0.7 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Kate Seear
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In recent years, there has been growing concern about poor mental health and wellbeing of both law students and those in the profession. These concerns have been building for the last two to three decades, and have gathered pace in the last few. As concerns about the impact of lawyering on those in the profession have grown, a separate but related set of developments have been unfolding across universities. Universities all over the world have been developing a heightened awareness of student needs, sensitivities and mental health, and have been considering how teaching methods, materials and styles may impact these. As part of this, a number of North American universities have begun to grapple with the question of whether content to which students are exposed in their degree should contain a ‘trigger warning’. A trigger warning is a cautionary note designed to alert students to potentially sensitive material in a syllabus, and which may, in some circumstances, allow them to be exempted from course content. Trigger warnings have generated significant debate in the United States academy. In other parts of the world, such as Australia, these debates are also gathering pace, with the appropriateness of trigger warnings for clinical legal education now also being considered. This paper explores whether trigger warnings are necessary in clinical legal education. This paper unfolds in three parts. First, drawing upon theoretical concerns about the politics of emotion, including ideas from Sara Ahmed and Judith Butler, I consider the philosophical and conceptual aspects of trigger warnings, including the dangers of academics defining which content is ‘triggering’ and which is not. Second, I explore some of the pedagogical implications that would flow from the use of trigger warnings in law clinics. Third, I examine some of the practical implications of the deployment of trigger warnings in clinics. I argue that academics should be cautious about calls to impose trigger warnings in clinical legal education, because they introduce a series of major philosophical, practical and pedagogical problems. I also argue that although trigger warnings may appear, on the face of it, to align with the values that many clinicians would see as being at the heart of clinical legal education, including social justice, respect for clients, minorities and disadvantaged populations, trigger warnings have the potential to paradoxically instantiate power dynamics, to entrench injustice, and to foreclose intellectual curiosity. They also have a series of implications for the ethics and politics of legal practice, some of which I consider to be both substantial and antithetical to the proper practice of clinical legal education.
法律诊所需要触发警告吗?哲学、教育学和实践问题
近年来,人们越来越关注法律专业学生和从业人员的心理健康状况。这些担忧在过去的二三十年中一直在积累,并在过去几年中加快了步伐。随着人们对律师行业影响的担忧日益加剧,大学里出现了一系列独立但相关的事态发展。世界各地的大学一直在提高对学生需求、敏感性和心理健康的认识,并一直在考虑教学方法、材料和风格如何影响这些。作为其中的一部分,许多北美大学已经开始努力解决一个问题,即学生在学位课程中接触的内容是否应该包含“触发警告”。触发警告是一种警示性提示,旨在提醒学生注意教学大纲中可能存在的敏感内容,在某些情况下,这可能使他们免于学习课程内容。触发警告在美国学术界引起了激烈的争论。在世界其他地区,如澳大利亚,这些辩论也在加快步伐,现在也在考虑是否适合临床法律教育的触发警告。本文探讨了在临床法学教育中触发警告是否必要。本文分三部分展开。首先,借鉴对情感政治的理论关注,包括Sara Ahmed和Judith Butler的观点,我考虑了触发警告的哲学和概念方面,包括学者定义哪些内容是“触发”,哪些不是的危险。其次,我探讨了在法律诊所使用触发警告会产生的一些教学意义。第三,我研究了在诊所部署触发警告的一些实际意义。我认为,学者们应该对在临床法律教育中施加触发警告的呼吁持谨慎态度,因为它们会带来一系列重大的哲学、实践和教学问题。我还认为,虽然从表面上看,触发警告可能与许多临床医生认为是临床法律教育核心的价值观一致,包括社会正义,尊重客户,少数民族和弱势群体,但触发警告有可能矛盾地实例化权力动态,巩固不公正,并排除求知欲。它们对法律实践的伦理和政治也有一系列的影响,其中一些我认为是实质性的,与临床法律教育的适当实践是对立的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Legal Education Review
Legal Education Review EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
自引率
66.70%
发文量
7
审稿时长
12 weeks
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