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Sessions Information
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January 4, 2018
1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Session Type: AALS Open Source Programs
Session Capacity: N/A
Location: N/A
Room: San Diego Ballroom C
Floor: North Tower/Lobby Level
Social media,
television and film, computer gaming, and other visual media pervade the lives
of our students as well as contemporary legal practice. Law schools must begin
to prepare students to make use of the visual representations as these forms
shape social norms and expectations for effective communication. Moreover,
visual representations are quite effective as teaching devices because they are
so vivid and because our students are intimately familiar with popular culture.
Popular culture media are often used in in teaching traditional law school
courses, such as evidence or professional responsibility. Increasingly, legal
educators teach students how to utilize visual images or pop culture narratives
in their future law practice (for example, in arguing to juries). Still other
instructors teach courses in law and popular culture itself, exploring the
intersection of popular culture with law, lawyers, and legal institutions. The Journal
of Legal Education will publish a symposium of short articles discussing
all three of these different uses of visual representations in legal education.
This program consists of presentations by six of these authors, followed by a
wide-ranging discussion of the uses of visual imagery in legal education.
Papers from this
program will be published in Journal of Legal Education.
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Session Speakers
Stanford Law School
Moderator and Speaker
Louisiana State University, Paul M. Hebert Law Center
Speaker
Vermont Law and Graduate School
Speaker
Dartmouth College
Speaker
University of Miami School of Law
Speaker
University of Washington School of Law
Speaker
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Session Fees
- [4210] AALS Open Source Program - Visual and Popular Culture Imagery in Legal Education: $0.00
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