A fish out of water? Legal practitioner - practitioner teacher? Bourdieu, the legal field and the scholarship of teaching in practical legal training


Autoria(s): Greaves, Kristoffer
Contribuinte(s)

[unknown]

Data(s)

01/01/2012

Resumo

It is surprising to discover during early doctoral research that there is a paucity of Australian scholarship using Bourdieu’s theoretical tools in the field of law, and in the sub-field of post-graduate pre-admission practical legal training. This article introduces Bourdieu’s conceptions of habitus, field, categories of capital, symbolic violence, and misrecognition. It describes how Bourdieu applied these tools to identify structural hostility between legal academics and practitioners, and the struggles for control in the field of law. Review of three North American studies that used Bourdieu’s theories follows, involving law students’ habitus in transition, class stratification in legal education, and gender stratification in law firm partnerships. Drawing on three internally connected ‘moments’ necessary to use Bourdieu’s tools, together with four critical questions concerning teachers’ engagement with the scholarship of teaching, this article identifies new questions for investigation. These questions will frame further research to discover whether the objective structures of the practical legal training field and the habitus of legal practitioners constrains them to act as ‘fish out of water’ in the context of a scholarship of teaching.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30049329

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Unpublished

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30049329/greaves-afishout-2012.pdf

Palavras-Chave #practical legal training #legal education #Australia #Bourdieu
Tipo

Conference Paper