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Incorporating Emotional Intelligence in Legal Education: A Theoretical Perspective
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Incorporating Emotional Intelligence in Legal Education: A Theoretical Perspective

Susan Douglas
e-Journal of Business Education & Scholarship of Teaching, Vol.9(2), pp.56-71
2015
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Abstract

Curriculum and Pedagogy Business and Management emotional intelligence legal education wellbeing reflective practice
Thinking like a lawyer' is traditionally associated with rational-analytical problem solving and an adversarial approach to conflict. These features have been correlated with problems of psychological, or emotional, distress amongst lawyers and law students. These problems provide a strong argument for incorporating a consideration of emotion into legal education. How to achieve this is a challenge for legal educators. Addressing that challenge, it is argued that emotional intelligence (EI) provides an existing and useful conceptual framework for acknowledging and incorporating emotion into legal education and practice. Advantages in adopting EI are argued. Goleman's model of EI is identified as the most readily accessible model for EI in law. Goleman's model is adapted and applied to clinical legal education as an optimal site for introducing law students to EI.

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