Private B.C. university vying for new law school
Written by Heather Gardiner Posted Date: June 25, 2012| If approved, Trinity Western University would have the fourth law school in British Columbia. |
Last September, Thompson Rivers University welcomed 75 first-year students to its new law faculty in Kamloops, B.C., and in the fall of 2013, Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont., will be home to the first law school in northern Ontario.
The latest proposal comes from Trinity Western University, a private Christian university in Langley, B.C., which hopes to offer a three-year JD program to 60 students starting in September 2015. If it receives approval from the B.C. Ministry of Advanced Education and the Federation of Law Societies of Canada, it would be the fourth law school in British Columbia.
Janet Epp Buckingham, an associate professor at Trinity Western, has been involved in developing the proposal for the past five years. She says establishing a law school has been in the university’s long-term plans for 20 years.
“[TWU’s] real focus is on developing leadership, and lawyers are leaders in their communities,” she says. “This is a step we want to take because it fits within our mission and mandate as a university.”
Established as a junior college in 1962, Trinity Western is now a full university that offers several professional programs, including business, nursing, and education. It is privately funded and would require a substantial amount of funding for a new law building.
If approved, it would be the first Christian law school in Canada, which Buckingham says would bring a unique perspective to the law.
“We have a lot of students who are interested in social justice, human trafficking, and care for the poor and there are biblical principles on justice and just society that will form part of that curriculum,” she tells 4Students.
Along with weaving Christian values into certain courses, students would also be able to specialize in charities and social justice or entrepreneurial law.
Ian Moes is an associate at Kuhn LLP in B.C., and a graduate of Trinity Western. He says “you’ll learn all of the same basics you’ll get at any other university . . . [the Christian aspect] just affects the environment in which it’s taught.”
Keeping in step with the recent push for more experiential learning at law schools, the university plans to emphasize practical education.
In light of the national articling shortage — currently most prevalent in B.C. and Ontario — Buckingham says TWU would have a stronger focus on skills training with a full course in practice management, a half course on the introduction to the practice of law, and a mandatory practicum component.
“The whole focus is really going to be on building skills alongside building legal analysis and understanding so that when students graduate from the law school they would be able to go into a small firm already with skills that they can use and apply,” she says.
TWU also plans to hire an articling co-ordinator to encourage small firms to take on articling students in an effort to create new articling placements.
Located just an hour outside of downtown Vancouver, Buckingham says the law school would take an outwards approach by encouraging graduates to practise in smaller communities where there is a greater need for lawyers.
“There’s a real problem — there are a lot of under-served communities,” she says. “There really does need to be a focus in consciously encouraging people to locate in underserved areas.”
She says the university has received tremendous support from the Langley community and local bar associations.
As a resident of Langley, Moes says having a law school nearby would be beneficial for students in the area.
“Geographically, it will be a huge bonus for people who want to go to a law school in the Fraser Valley area of British Columbia,” he says.
The university expects to receive approval of its proposal within six to 12 months.
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The U.S. now has a very large number of law graduates, often heavily indebted, unable to find adequate, or even any, employment relevant to their legal training, especially when they are not graduates of the most prestigious institutions. The depth of bitterness is reflected in the blogging on a scatalogical website devoted to the subject.
Ontario has been struggling to find articles for all graduating law students.
Professional schools are prestigious for universities and are usually expected to be advantageous financially. So they are attractive projects. Of course, additional law schools must almost inevitable strain public financial, already constrained in a recessionary economic environment.
Exactly what is it that makes a "Christian" law school different? Are secularly trained lawyers not interested in Human Rights, etc.? Shades of Jerry Falwell's "Liberty U."
"Today, Canada has 16 common law schools, the same number it had three decades ago, when the population was smaller by a third. While some schools have opened extra spaces, the impact has been minimal—in 2006, 2,973 law students were admitted to the profession, just 133 more than a decade before.
...Canada, with a population of over 33 million, has the lowest number of law schools per capita of any Commonwealth country: in a 2007 survey, he found that the U.K. has 75 law schools for a population of nearly 61 million, while Australia has 28 law schools, and 21 million people. Naturally, Canada also has a small supply of lawyers. Here, there’s about one lawyer or notary for every 421 people. In the U.S., it’s one lawyer for every 265 people."
"... we do encourage the expansion of law schools because we realize that truly is the answer to the access to legal services problem.”
See:
Our secular and public law schools are just fine. If law students want to practice Christianity they are welcome to do so.
One of the main points of law school is to teach students that only a position with sufficient evidence can be sustained. Faith by definition is accepting ideas with no or insufficient evidence. Students and lawyers are free to do that as much as they wish ... outside law school and outside their practices.
Most of these law students have no intention to move to rural areas; if this law school opens up, you had best believe that they will all be vying for vancouver jobs.
"Charter s29. Nothing in this Charter abrogates or derogates from any rights or privileges guaranteed by or under the Constitution of Canada in respect of denominational, separate or dissentient schools."
According to Maclean's, "Despite the growing number of experts who say Canada needs more lawyers, there’s one powerful group that disagrees—the lawyers themselves."
http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/02/02/where%E2%80%99s-a-lawyer-when-you-need-one/
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That's the standard line law schools use to justify pumping out tons of grads. However, if you actually survey law students, 95% or more want to practice law. It is nice to say just enjoy the study of law but when you are paying $20,000/year in tuition, 99% of students want at least a reasonable chance of finding work in the field they spent years studying. This isn't a liberal arts degree folks. This is a professional degree and right now the supply of grads exceeds the demand for legal servies which is not growing. That's why there was an articling task force recently because students are not getting jobs. BTW in the USA, they've abolished articling and pump out JD's like crazy but unemployment among youner lawyers is just awful due to supply far exceeding demand. This isn't a case of an expanding pie.
Try using your blind stereotyping when you lay a case before aa judge. See how far it takes you.
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