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21 J. Legal Stud. Educ. [iii] (2003-2004)

handle is hein.journals/jlse21 and id is 1 raw text is: 








EDITOR'S CORNER


   This is the last issue of the Journal of Legal Studies Education for
which I am Editor in Chief. During the years of this editorship, national
and world events have been unquestionably unsettling. As a country, we
have been forced to confront threats to our safety, challenges to our civil
rights, and the resulting debate about the potential clash between
certain values and principles. How does this impact our profession? As
teachers of law, it is impossible not to consider the times in which we
live as we determine  pedagogical approaches to the way  we teach
students whose historical memory is uniquely different than our own.
As an institution, law is the thread that holds our societal institutions
together and the means for ordering our relationships; how we teach
students to think about, evaluate, and make choices about this order
rivals the importance of the substantive issues we teach.
   Issue 21:1 includes two articles that address the philosophical, and
practical, relationship and integration of critical thinking and funda-
mental  principles into, first, a course on legal studies in the general
education curriculum, and second, a model of human rights education.
In Leviathans, Critical Thinking and Legal Philosophy: A Proposal for
a General Education Legal Studies Course, Nim Razook provides the
groundwork  for a course in the general education curriculum, Introduc-
tion to Law  and Legal  Reasoning. He explains how  this course is
strongly connected to the humanities, and that it develops critical
thinking while celebrating ambiguity. Legal reasoning, jurisprudence,
and  the organizing role of law and social contracts are some of the
elements of the described course. Razook shares specific readings and a
unified approach, while noting that an individual instructor can tailor
a general education course of this nature to his or her own strengths. In
A Model and Resource Guide to Incorporating Human Rights Education
into the Business Law Classroom, Lucien Dhooge utilizes the United
Nations' document  addressing corporations and fundamental human
rights to show how these overarching principles can be integrated into
a business law course that values a global perspective. The integration
of human  rights material into a business law course forces students to
critically consider the way in which law relates to the fundamental
values of the global corporate, business society.
  A fundamental  value we all hold dear as teachers is honesty, the topic
of Melanie  Williams and  William  Hoseks' article, Strategies for
Reducing  Academic  Dishonesty. As we have discussed in previous
issues in the JLSE, addressing dishonesty and encouraging student
honesty in the classroom setting may be challenging. Williams and
Hosek  provide an economic theory and discussion of the reasons for

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