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Educating for Well-Being in Law: Positive Professional Identities and Practice


Educating for Well-Being in Law: Positive Professional Identities and Practice

Hardback by Strevens, Caroline; Field, Rachael

Educating for Well-Being in Law: Positive Professional Identities and Practice

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£114.75

ISBN:
9781138477568
Publication Date:
23 Jul 2019
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
216 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 22 - 27 May 2024
Educating for Well-Being in Law: Positive Professional Identities and Practice

Description

Bringing together the current international body of knowledge on key issues for educating for well-being in law, this book offers comparative perspectives across jurisdictions, and utilises a range of theoretical lenses (including socio-legal, psychological and ethical theories) in analysing well-being and legal education in law. The chapters include innovative and tested research methodologies and strategies for educating for well-being. Asking and answering the question as to whether law is special in terms of producing psychological distress in law students, law teachers and the profession, and bringing together common and opposing perspectives, this book also seeks to highlight excellent practice in promoting a positive professional identity at law school and beyond resulting in an original contribution to knowledge, and new discourses of analysis.

Contents

Preface; Acknowledgements; Chapter 1: The Ethics of Well-being: Psychological Health as the Vanguard for Sociological Change; Chapter 2: Self-Care as a professional virtue for lawyers; Chapter 3: Values: The Flip Side of the Well-being Coin; Chapter 4: Well-Being and a Positive Professional Identity in the Legal Profession: A Snapshot of the UK Bar; Chapter 5: Determined to be Professional, Ethical and Well; Chapter 6: The Information Gap: A comparative study of the paradigms shaping perceptions of career success for law undergraduates and professional legal training students in Australia and the latent implications of non-professional legal career opportunities for law graduates in England; Chapter 7: Widening the Approach to Ethics Teaching and Positively Affecting Ethical Professional Identity of Trainee Solicitors in Ireland; Chapter 8: Connectivity, Socialisation and Identity Formation: Exploring Mental Well-being in Online Distance Learning Law Students; Chapter 9: Which Hat Shall I Wear Today? Exploring the Professional and Ethical Implications of Law Clinic Supervision; Chapter 10: Clinical Legal Education and the Hidden Curriculum in the Neoliberal University in England and Wales; Chapter 11: Resilience, Positive Motivation and Professional Identity: The Experience of Law Clinic Students Working with Real Clients; Chapter 12: Meditation in Legal Education: The Value Added Toward the Well-Being of Law Students; Chapter 13: Identity, Well-being and Law Students; Index

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