2020
DOI: 10.25304/rlt.v28.2434
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A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students

Abstract: The sharp decline in levels of state-funded legal support has highlighted the importance of publicly available sources of legal information for facilitating access to justice. Mobile apps present an opportunity to provide legal information that can be targeted at particular audiences. University law schools, sometimes in partnership with civil society organisations, are beginning to engage their students in cross-disciplinary projects to create mobile apps, which can provide free legal information and guidance… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Universities and law schools can be empowered by using technology to leverage disciplinary knowledge, with the growing potential that this knowledge can be transferred to other discipline that facilitates a better student engagement [13], showing a positive future regarding the levels at which this technologies can be exploited to maintain the growing interest for legal education to transition into a more digitally focused learning process, empowering students to expand their disciplinary knowledge (regarding learning technologies) in the process. However, classrooms within these universities have been long dominated by the traditional forms of teaching, which in exchange can present a problem to internationalize the classrooms [14] (this in reference to the possibilities that online learning can bring while expanding the reach of different universities); in this regard, legal education can benefit from online learning in the way that virtual classrooms and other digital platforms and interactive tools let teachers reach a more transnational level to improve their learning process.…”
Section: Online Learning and Legal Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Universities and law schools can be empowered by using technology to leverage disciplinary knowledge, with the growing potential that this knowledge can be transferred to other discipline that facilitates a better student engagement [13], showing a positive future regarding the levels at which this technologies can be exploited to maintain the growing interest for legal education to transition into a more digitally focused learning process, empowering students to expand their disciplinary knowledge (regarding learning technologies) in the process. However, classrooms within these universities have been long dominated by the traditional forms of teaching, which in exchange can present a problem to internationalize the classrooms [14] (this in reference to the possibilities that online learning can bring while expanding the reach of different universities); in this regard, legal education can benefit from online learning in the way that virtual classrooms and other digital platforms and interactive tools let teachers reach a more transnational level to improve their learning process.…”
Section: Online Learning and Legal Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Digitization already has an impact on legal issues. McGinnis and Pearce reckon that the disruption of the legal profession has begun and that technological acceleration will have significant implications for both legal practice and legal education (McFaul, FitzGerald, Byrne et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%