Courses - Dalhousie Law Journal Advanced Legal Writing
LAWS 2358 Dalhousie Law Journal Advanced Legal Writing
CREDIT HOURS: 1
This course focuses on developing students’ editing and academic writing skills. The course has two primary components. First, each student will work with a student in the Dalhousie Law Journal Editorial Assistantship course on editorial review of three or four articles accepted by the Journal for publication. Second, each student will be expected to work with a paper they completed as part of their second year course work with a view to submitting that paper for publication (submission is at each student's discretion). The progress of each student's paper will be tracked and monitored in bi-weekly meetings. The timing of these meetings will be set in September and a time will be chosen that does not clash with students' other classes. These meetings will give the faculty editor and students in both this course and the Dalhousie Law Journal Editorial Assistantship course the chance to discuss their assignments and any challenges the articles or their individual writing projects present, as well as the ongoing operations of the Journal. Over the course of the year, students will conduct additional research related to their paper, re-organize and substantially edit their work, and receive and take into account peer review reports. Student writing skills should improve through practice and the receipt of feedback. As an optional component of the course, students may work with DLJ authors or faculty members on a dissemination project (blog or podcast).
NOTES: Students taking this course must register in and complete
LAWS 2357 &
LAWS 2358 in consecutive terms; credit will not be granted if courses are not completed consecutively. Generally, a maximum of six students will be selected for the course. Students must be recommended by a professor who evaluated a paper they authored in the student’s second year. Preference is given to students who have also completed the Dalhousie Law Journal Editorial Assistantship. The course does NOT fulfil the law school’s major paper requirement.
RESTRICTIONS: Only available to students in third year. Students can register only with permission and overrides within the law school.