Date:
- 20 July 2005
Location:
- Macau Ricci Institue
Time:
- 18:00 to 21:30
Cost:
- Free
Languages:
- English
Speaker
Roderick O'Brien
Roderick O'Brien qualified as a lawyer in South Australia in 1971. For six of the past ten years he has been teaching in universities in China, most recently at the Northwest Institute of Politics in Law in Xi'an (Shaanxi province). He has published in law journals in China, Europe, and Australia, including in the most recent issue of Chinese Cross Currents (Vol.2, No.2): "The Value and Values of Legal Aid in China."
Introduction
Roderick O'Brien's presentation will deal with: the expansion of teaching of law to around 300 schools; the merger of soviet-style specialist colleges, and the development of more comprehensive universities; the emergence of Legal Aid in Chinese universities; the change in traditional teaching methods, and notably the introduction of clinical legal education; the state of the professional Master degree (法律硕士); the Unified Justice Examination and its influence on teaching; the Law teachers and professional practice; the teaching of legal ethics; the electives and credit points; the proliferation of institutes within universities; the proliferation of legal websites; the use of foreign language in teaching specialist subjects; and finally the reduction in “ specialised secondary schools and colleges ” (中专 and 大专) law courses and institutes.