Legal education in Asia: from imitation to innovation
In: Brill's Asian law series 6
Front Matter -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1: The Fall and Rise of Legal Education in Asia: Inhibition, Imitation, Innovation /Simon Chesterman -- Chapter 2: Asian Culture Meets Western Law, the Collective Confronts the Individual: The Necessity and Challenges of a Cross-cultural Legal Education /Francis SL Wang and Laura WY Young -- Chapter 3: Going Global: Australia Looks to Internationalise Legal Education /Ann Black and Peter Black -- Chapter 4: The Rhetoric of Corruption and The Law School Curriculum: Why Aren't Law Schools Teaching About Corruption? /Helena Whalen-Bridge -- Chapter 5: Teaching Comparative Law in Singapore: Global and Local Challenges /Andrew Harding and Maartje de Visser -- Chapter 6: International Moot Court as Equaliser: An Asian Paradigm /Chen Siyuan -- Chapter 7: "Closing the Gap" between Legal Education and Courtroom Practice in Japan: Yôken Jijitsu Teaching and the Role of the Judiciary /Souichirou Kozuka -- Chapter 8: Legal Education in South Korea: Does Continuance of the Old Judicial Examination Style Ruin the Dream of Ideal Legal Education? /Yong Chul Park -- Chapter 9: Experientialization of Legal Education in Hong Kong: Adoption and Adaptation /Wilson Chow , Michael Ng and Julienne Jen -- Chapter 10: Preparing for the Sinicization of the Western Legal Tradition: The Case of Peking University School of Transnational Law /Philip J. McConnaughay and Colleen B. Toomey -- Chapter 11: Globalisation and Innovative Study: Legal Education in China /Li Xueyao , Li Yiran and Hu Jiaxiang -- Chapter 12: Legal Education in 21st Century Vietnam: From Imitation to Renovation /Bui Ngoc Son -- Chapter 13: Legal Studies at Thammasat University: A Microcosm of the Development of Thai Legal Education /Munin Pongsapan -- Chapter 14: Second Fiddle: Why Indonesia's Top Graduates Shy Away from being Judges and Prosecutors, and What We Can Do about It /Linda Yanti Sulistiawati and Ibrahim Hanif.