Governing depression in Australian legal education : power, psychology and advanced liberal government


Autoria(s): Ball, Matthew James
Data(s)

01/12/2011

Resumo

Legal educators in Australia have increasingly become concerned with the mental health of law students. The apparent risk posed by legal education to a student’s mental health has led to the deployment of a variety of measures to address these problems. By exploring these measures as productive power relations attempting to shape law students, this paper outlines how this government of depression is achieved, and the potential costs of these power relations. It examines one central Australian text offering advice about how students and law student societies can address depression, and argues that doing so not only involves students adopting particular practices of self-government to shape their legal personae, but also relies on an extension of the power relations of legal education. In addition, this paper will link this advice — which privatises the issue of depression, responsibilises individuals and communities, privileges psychological expertise, and seeks to govern ‘at a distance’ — to broader forms of social administration that presently characterise many Western societies. Doing so allows legal educators to reflect on the effects of their attempts to govern depression, and to consider new ways of altering the power relations of legal education.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48123/

Publicador

Australasian Law Teachers Association

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48123/1/48123.pdf

Ball, Matthew James (2011) Governing depression in Australian legal education : power, psychology and advanced liberal government. Legal Education Review, 21(2), pp. 277-301.

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Justice

Palavras-Chave #160299 Criminology not elsewhere classified #189999 Law and Legal Studies not elsewhere classified #depression #governmentality #legal education #Foucault #mental health #law student
Tipo

Journal Article