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ALTA Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 23 September 2011
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE
LEGAL ACADEMY*
Margaret
Thornton†
1. INTRODUCTION
The contemporary shift from social
liberalism to neoliberalism has exercised a profound effect on
contemporary
society. In fact, theorists such as Nikolas Rose speak of ‘the death of
the social.1
Instead of collective good, the focus is on capital accumulation
and promotion of the self
through the market, a role that is facilitated by
government and the key institutions of civil
society, which includes
universities. I will trace the brief life of an experiment to include the
social
in the legal academy, which collapsed, in part, because of the
transition from socio-liberalism to
neoliberalism. My purpose here is not to
engage in a thoroughgoing critique of the effects of the
corporatisation of
the university on legal education,2 but to outline the trajectory of change at
La
Trobe University to show how it forms one segment of the neo-liberal
mosaic that has
transformed higher education. Of course, the acts I describe
could not have occurred without the
agency of individual administrators, but
the prevailing political economy of higher education
created the conditions
that facilitated these acts.
†
1
2
Professor of Law and ARC
Professorial Fellow, ANU College of Law, Australian National University,
Canberra. She was
variously Foundation Professor of the Law Program,
Professor of Law and Legal Studies and Inaugural Richard
McGarvie Chair of
Socio-Legal Studies at La Trobe University, Melbourne, 1990–2006.
Rose
Nikolas ‘The Death of the Social? Refiguring the Territory of Government
(1996) 25 Economy and Society 327.
I have elaborated on the demise of the
social in legal education elsewhere. See, eg, Thornton Margaret ‘Among the
Ruins:
Law in the Neo-Liberal Academy’ (2001) 20 Windsor Yearbook of
Access to Justice 3; Thornton Margaret ‘The Demise of
Diversity in
Legal Education: Globalisation and the New Knowledge Economy’ (2001)
International Journal of the Legal
Profession 37; Thornton Margaret
Inhabiting a Political Economy of Uncertainty: Academic Life in the 21st Century
Occasional Paper
No 2 Institute of Postcolonial Studies Melbourne 2002;
Thornton Margaret ‘Neo-liberal Melancholia: The Case of
Feminist Legal
Scholarship’ (2004) 20 Australian Feminist Law Journal 7. See also, eg,
James Nickolas ‘Power-Knowledge in
Australian Legal Education:
Corporatism’s Reign’ [2004] SydLawRw 28; (2004) 26(4) Sydney Law Review 587; Collier
Richard ‘“We’re all Socio-
Legal Now?” Legal
Education, Scholarship and the “Global Knowledge Economy” —
Reflections on the UK
Experience’ [2004] SydLawRw 25; (2004) 26(4) Sydney Law Review 503;
Collier Richard ‘The Changing University and the (Legal)
Academic
Career Rethinking the Relationship between Women, Men and the
‘Private Life’ of the Law School’ (2002) 22 Legal
Studies
1.
3
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
2. A WORD ABOUT THE
SOCIAL
The meaning of the social in socio-legal is unpredictable and
transient. It embraces the
contextualisation, reflexivity and plurality of
legal knowledge that transcends a purely doctrinal
approach to the study of
law. Gibbons et al in their study of knowledge production capture
the
distinction through what they term Mode 1 and Mode 2 knowledge.3 Mode 1
refers to traditional
disciplinary knowledge which claims to be universal,
whereas Mode 2 seeks to take account of the
complexity of knowledge
production with regard to its social context. By implication, Mode
2
acknowledges the validity of critiquing the premises of Mode 1 knowledge.
Mode 2 also
recognises the inability of legal formalism to devise an adequate
response to contemporary
problems such as domestic violence or sexual
assault. It recognises that the subjectivity of
women’s experiences,
for example, is a relevant source of knowledge. By seeking
exclusively
technocratic solutions to social problems, law, in its Mode 1
sense, endeavours to slough off
uncertainty and affectivity, as well as
discomfiting questions as to the ethical significance of its
role.
There is an ongoing struggle between Mode 1 and Mode 2 knowledges within
all
disciplines but the struggle is acute in law, where there is a
significant ideological investment in
adhering to Mode 1. The conservative
view is that it is not possible to learn simultaneously how
to think like a
lawyer and to engage in a critique of law’s premises.4 The progressive
view is that,
in the absence of critique and interrogation, the study of law
is reduced to a mechanistic exercise.
While freedom to teach is understood to
be a key site of academic freedom, this freedom has
rarely been understood to
extend to law because certain presuppositions prevail. It is
therefore
difficult to dislodge Mode 1 knowledge in law from its central
position. Mode 1 knowledge
should nevertheless not be thought of as static
and unchanging for it is constantly challenged by
the heterarchy of Mode 2.
Legal education is exceptionally sensitive to changing community
values. The
idea of legal education as training for citizenship once reflected the
prevailing view of
the lawyer as ethical community leader.5 Now, only
credentialism, vocationalism and
commodification count because they embody
the neoliberal values in vogue.
Neither legal knowledge, nor any other
form of knowledge for that matter, is immune
from the social. It is one of
the intractable myths of legal positivism that law is autonomous and
can be
intellectually separated from the social forces that animate it. In fact, the
persistent
abrasion caused by the interaction of the social with legal
formalism produces a new form of
3
4
5
Gibbons Michael, Limoges
Camille, Nowotny Helga, Schwartzman Simon, Scott Peter and Trow Martin The
New
Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in
Contemporary Societies Sage London 1994.
Duncanson Ian ‘Legal Education
and the Possibility of Critique: An Australian Perspective’ (1993) 8
Canadian Journal of
Law and Society 59 at 68.
Eg Pue W Wesley
‘Educating the Total Jurist’ (2005) 8(2) Legal Ethics 208; Kronman A
T The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of
the Legal Profession Belknap Cambridge
Mass 1993; Glendon Mary A A Nation under Lawyers: How the Crisis in the
Legal
Profession is transforming American Society Farrar Straus and Giroux
New York 1994.
4
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
knowledge —
namely, socio-legal knowledge. Thus, rather than accepting a dichotomy
between
Mode 1 and Mode 2, socio-legal knowledge might be thought of as
transdisciplinary knowledge,
akin to women’s studies or cultural
studies, for it similarly has recourse to a range of
disciplinary
perspectives that provide new ways of seeing. These new forms of
knowledge are deeply
threatening to dominant power relations and must be
quickly nipped in the bud. As Ian
Duncanson points out, a legal perspective
alone is accepted as authentic:
[T]o be authentic, an understanding of law
must be from a lawyer’s point of view and that
that privileged
perspective can probably be achieved only by someone who has a
lawyer’s
credentials.6
The privileging of the legal
standpoint in legal education is underpinned by the
prescriptiveness of the
requirements of the admitting authorities, which also emphasises Mode 1.
The
present national requirements for admission, as specified by the Priestley
Eleven,7 assume
that all that counts in the production of the ‘compleat
lawyer’ is knowledge of doctrine and
practical skills, for no reference
whatsoever is made in the requirements of the admitting
authorities to the
significance of the social or the context in which the legal knowledge is
located.
The dominant philosophy of legal positivism with its artificial line
of demarcation between law
and morality, law and history, law and society
generally,8 further entrenches the privileged focus
on Mode 1 knowledge in
traditional law programs. It effectively deflects attention away from
the
manner in which law is deployed to serve the market economy at the
expense of all else.
3. OF HISTORY AND OTHER THINGS
The Department of
Legal Studies at La Trobe was established in 1972, and legal studies
subjects
were taught to BA students for twenty years. A substantial range of
offerings was available, with
particular strengths in feminist legal studies
and criminology. Legal studies subjects were the most
popular offerings in
the BA program, with approximately 1,000 first year students in 1990.
What
was distinctive about La Trobe was its genuine commitment to an
interdisciplinary approach to
the study of law and society; it was not merely
a matter of paying lip service to the concept. When
I came to La Trobe in
1990, twenty staff held law degrees and twenty identified primarily
with
disciplines such as sociology, philosophy, criminology, economics and
history. This diversity was
praised by various visitors to the Department,
such as the distinguished legal scholar, Professor
Richard Abel of UCLA, who
observed in 1985:
6
7
8
Duncanson Ian ‘Degrees of Law:
Interdisciplinarity in the Law Discipline’ [1996] GriffLawRw 3; (1996) 5 Griffith Law Review 77
at 80.
This is a shorthand reference to the eleven ‘areas of
knowledge’ required for admission within Australasian
jurisdictions.
They are: criminal law and procedure, torts, contracts,
property, equity, company law, administrative law, federal and
state
constitutional law, civil procedure, evidence and professional conduct.
See
http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lawlink/olsc/ll_olsc.nsf/pages/lra_admission
Eg,
Hart H A L The Concept of Law Clarendon Press Oxford at 253 note 181.
5
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
The Department has an
enormous wealth of highly talented, diverse, productive people. In
these
terms, it is far better endowed than all but a very few institutions in the
world, and
stands comparison with Wisconsin, Berkeley and Oxford.9
Within
Australia, it was also accepted that La Trobe was a major asset to the legal
academy. This
was acknowledged by the Pearce Committee in its review of
Australian legal education in 1987.10
The Pearce Report was critical of the
excessive attention paid to doctrine without regard to
context in most law
schools, signalling again the ambiguity around the social.
La Trobe
socio-legal scholars felt that the Department’s reputation for creative
thinking
about law bestowed a particular responsibility on them to enhance
the calibre of legal education.11
The fact that the La Trobe focus was not
directed to law for practice but law as a social
phenomenon meant that the
legal studies curriculum was not subject to acceptance of a
predetermined
standpoint, as with the LLB program. The interdisciplinary reputation of La
Trobe
was further enhanced by initiatives such as the establishment of the
annual Law and History
conference in 1982; the annual Law and Society
conference in 1983; the scholarly journal, Law in
Context, in 1983; and the
National Centre for Socio-Legal Studies in 1988.
I was delighted to be
appointed to a Chair in Legal Studies at La Trobe in 1989, where
the
establishment of an innovative LLB programme had been mooted. The
appointment also
afforded the opportunity of working with some of
Australia’s leading Australian socio-legal
scholars, including Kit
Carson, Brendan Cassidy,12 Ian Duncanson, Judith Grbich, Adrian Howe,
Pat
O’Malley, Andrea Rhodes-Little and Chris Tomlins, who were subsequently
joined by Greta
Bird, Helen Brown, Sandy Cook, Sue Davies, Pete Johnston, Rob
McQueen and Ann Orford.
They have all left the School now, but I acknowledge
their significant contribution to what, with
the benefit of hindsight, was a
high political moment in the history of legal education in Australia.
The
opportunity to play a role in a unique programme in which the study of law would
be located
within a School of Social Science, where there was a demonstrated
commitment to critical socio-
legal scholarship, was very enticing. However,
the vision for an innovative law school quickly
evaporated. La Trobe elected
to borrow law school curricula from elsewhere, like
‘second-hand
clothes’, rather than ‘dare to be
different’.13 The neo-conservativism that goes hand-in-glove
with
neoliberalism had begun to manifest itself even before the program
began.
9
10
11
12
13
Quoted in Carson W G Blackshield A R and
Stamm M J Department of Legal Studies: History, Aims and Objectives La
Trobe
University 1985 at 5.
Pearce Dennis Campbell Enid and Don Harding
Australian Law Schools: A Discipline Assessment for the Commonwealth
Tertiary
Education Commission (Pearce Report) Australian Government
Publishing Service Canberra 1987.
Grbich Judith ‘Legal Education at La
Trobe: VPSEC Approval to Legal Education at La Trobe University’
Department of
Legal Studies La Trobe University Bundoora 22 February
1991.
Dr Brendan Cassidy died on 10 May 2000.
L’Estrange Giselle
‘The Law Course Is La Trobe prostituting itself?’ SRC Alternative
Handbook 1992 Latrobe University
Bundoora 1992 at 9–10.
6
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
4. THE CHALLENGE OF
ADDING IN LAW
Despite the suspicion towards the social in legal education to
which I have alluded, La Trobe’s
commitment to socio-legal scholarship
was a factor that was central to the establishment of what
was to be the
third Victorian law school.14 A submission to the Victorian
Post-secondary
Education Commission (VPSEC)15 justified the establishment of
a law program at La Trobe in
terms of the desirability of diversity in legal
education. The La Trobe program was not going to
be a pale copy of existing
programs at Melbourne or Monash, but a distinctive program based on
its
socio-legal strengths. In a classic formulation of Mode 2 knowledge, La
Trobe:
Proposed a law program as an interdisciplinary study of the law in its
social context,
combining and integrating law with the perspectives and
intellectual skills of the social
sciences.16
This rationale was accepted
by VPSEC. The then Chancellor of La Trobe University, the late
Richard
McGarvie,17 a Supreme Court judge and Chair of the Academic Course
Appraisal
Committee, was also strongly supportive of La Trobe’s
socio-legal orientation. He believed the
training of lawyers in the social
sciences was essential in the belief that it would make them more
effective
in dealing with contemporary problems:
[Students] need to understand the
basic theory of the law and to be able to apply both the
lessons of history
and the information generated by the research skills of the social
sciences
as to what has been happening in an area in the past and what is
likely to happen if particular
changes are made...We are at peril of
producing as potential leaders within the legal system
highly efficient
technocrats who have learnt nothing from the past and have little notion
of
the risks to be averted in the future.18
In my Inaugural
Lecture, ‘Portia lost in the Groves of Academe’,19 I addressed
the
challenge involved in grafting a law programme onto an established legal
studies program within a
school of social sciences. Although earlier
institutional attempts to integrate the social formally
into legal education,
such as that of the Realists at Columbia and Yale in the 1920s, 30s and
40s
had met with resistance, I was hopeful that the problems encountered in
past experiments might
be averted at La Trobe. First, the law program would
be located within a School of
Social
14
15
16
17
18
19
Deakin also applied and was
successful in establishing a law programme at the same time as La
Trobe.
VPSEC, which formerly approved new tertiary courses in Victoria, was
abolished in 1993 (Tertiary Education Act 1993 (Vic)
s 24).
Victorian
Post-Secondary Education Commission Report of Review of Legal Education in
Victoria Melbourne 1991 at 9.
Richard McGarvie resigned as Chancellor when he
was appointed Governor of Victoria in 1992, a position he held until
1997. He
died in 2003.
McGarvie Hon Justice R E ‘The Function of a Degree: Core
Subjects’ Paper presented at Law Council of Australia Legal
Education
Conference Bond University Queensland 14 February 1991 at 10, 11.
Thornton
Margaret ‘Portia lost in the Groves of Academe wondering what to do about
Legal Education’ La Trobe
University Melbourne 1991; reprinted in
Duncanson Ian (ed), Legal Education and Legal Knowledge (1991) 9 Law in
Context
(Special Issue) 9; (1991) 34 Australian Universities Review
26.
7
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
Sciences and not
artificially cordoned off from the social forces that inform it, as is the case
with
a separate faculty of law; secondly, by having students undertake
integrated joint degrees in both
law and social sciences, the privileging of
legal over non-legal knowledge would be minimised;20
and, thirdly, the
teaching of the law program would be conducted by multidisciplinary
teams.
Thus, rather than ‘legal scholar as dilettante’, taking
disciplinary baubles from here, there and
everywhere,21 La Trobe would have
specialist historians, philosophers, sociologists and
economists, as well as
lawyers, involved in teaching a dynamic and creative law program.
When approval came from VPSEC to begin the law program, a year’s grace was
sought
from the University in order to develop an innovative curriculum but
this was disallowed.
‘Stealing a march’ on competitors, rather
than developing the most imaginative program, signalled
the corporatised
context in which the La Trobe law program had its genesis. In this
ultra-
competitive environment, law had become a popular choice for
vice-chancellors because of the
seemingly unstoppable demand for law places
and the hope that high TER scores would enhance
their university’s
student profiles. It was widely believed also that law could be offered
‘on the
cheap’, or taught ‘under a gum tree’, as one
commentator had suggested at the time of the Martin
Report in 1964.22 The
myth of the appropriateness of an impoverished ‘chalk and talk’
pedagogy
for law made it difficult to obtain internal seed funding for the La
Trobe program; even the idea
of a law librarian was initially accorded short
shrift.23
An element of diversity in the student body was preserved
in the initial admissions criteria,
which required applicants to have
completed at least two years of tertiary education and to write a
250-word
statement as to why they wished to study law. In fact, most were graduates,
which
meant that they were less likely than school-leavers to adopt an
unquestioning Mode 1
approach.24 Many came from non-English speaking
backgrounds and were the first members of
their families to experience
tertiary education. They wanted a legal education that would equip
them with
the tools to effect a more just society, rather than merely serve corporate
clients.
Indeed, the La Trobe admission practices sought to recognise that
only about 50 per cent of all
Australian law graduates entered traditional
private practice and remained there after five years.25
This reality
justified a focus on education, as opposed merely to
training.
20
21
22
23
24
25
Integrated joint degrees were
never in fact instituted at La Trobe, but the idea was pursued at Griffith
University. See
Berns Sandra ‘Through a Glass Darkly: Legal Education
at Century’s Turn’ (2000) 25 Alternative Law Journal 265.
Cf
Kerruish Valerie ‘Barefoot in the Kitchen: A Response to Jack
Goldring’ (1988) 18 University of Western Australia Law
Review 167 at
169.
Committee on the Future of Tertiary Education in Australia Tertiary
Education in Australia: Report to the Australian Universities
Commission
(Martin Report) Government Printer Melbourne 1964 Vol II at 57. The Martin
Report was the first major state
intervention into legal education in
Australia. See Parker Christine and Goldsmith Andrew ‘“Failed
Sociologists”
in the
Market Place: Law Schools in Australia’
(1998) 25(1) Journal of Law and Society 33 at 34.
The law collection was
housed in the general library and the Chief Librarian was of the view that if
Law and Legal Studies
had a dedicated law librarian, other disciplines, such
as Music and Chemistry, would also want their own librarians.
The average age
of the initial cohort in the law program was 29, a decade older than
school-leavers. While it is conceded
that some of them were motivated to
assume the trappings of thinking like a lawyer as soon as possible, an
Honours
degree in Philosophy, Politics or Sociology helps to fend off the
legocentric mindset and sharpen critical skills.
The survey of law graduates
conducted by Pearce et al in 1987 found that 56.6% of respondents were working
in the
private profession, although another 30% were working in employment of
an ‘essentially legal’ nature. See Pearce et al
above note 10 in
Vol 1 at 24.
8
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
The difference
is crucial, as education necessarily involves interrogation and
critique,
whereas training is primarily concerned with memorising and
regurgitating known knowledge.
The technical focus of the latter,26 is geared
to training at the expense of education. The tension
between training and
education is by no means peculiar to La Trobe, of course, since it
has
bedevilled the teaching of law since it moved from apprenticeship to the
legal academy in the 19th
century. William Twining’s essay,
‘Pericles and the Plumber’, with its imagery of lawyer
as
statesman and policymaker versus technocrat graphically captures the
schizophrenia that besets
all law schools as they seek to satisfy
simultaneously the expectations of two masters: the academy
and the legal
profession. Within a neoliberal context, the balance has tipped, for it is
training that
is deemed to have superior use value in the market, while
education has become a dispensable
luxury.
5. SLOUGHING OFF THE
SOCIAL
The law program had barely begun before its distinctive possibilities
were being eroded. In a
competitive marketised environment, difference is
perceived to be a form of otherness. Managers
assume that newcomer
institutions will be unable to compete unless they conform to
existing
patterns of orthodoxy and homogeneity. To compete in the legal
education market, it is assumed
that the product has to be essentially the
same — like breakfast foods — with only a minor
element of
differentiation in appearance or packaging. In this environment, La
Trobe’s unique
socio-legal strengths were interpreted as
inferiority.
To reassure the admitting authorities that the social
was not going to overshadow doctrine,
the core curriculum was devised along
conventional lines. Initially, there appeared to be space for
diversity in
the optional subjects, but tension arose as to whether people without law
degrees
could teach law-related knowledge to law students. It was assumed
that they could teach legal
studies (the generic descriptor for the suite of
subjects offered to BA students), but not law
(which qualified students for
admission to practice). Echoing the notion of authenticity to which
I have
already adverted, this assumption discounted the idea of interdisciplinarity
altogether.
Several excellent socio-legal scholars saw the writing on the
wall and left. With their departure,
the equilibrium that had existed within
the Department for so long between law and other social
science disciplines
began to fragment. The rift was accentuated with the appointment of
several
traditional ‘black letter’ lawyers deemed to be necessary
to teach the core subjects, which were
conceptualised in conventional Mode 1
terms along the lines determined by the admitting
authorities. The funding
for these positions was made available by the Vice-Chancellor and
the
appointments overseen by the Dean of Social Sciences.
The
following decade saw the development of a number of specific strategies that
further
eviscerated the opportunity of La Trobe realising the vision of
becoming a unique law school.
The most significant involved an act of
restructuring, the paradigmatic sign of the corporatised
26
Thornton
Margaret ‘Technocentrism in the Law School: Why the Gender and Colour of
Law remain the Same’ (1998) 36
Osgoode Hall Law Journal 369.
9
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
university. Legal
Studies lost its social science orientation when its former partners, Politics
and
Sociology, were assigned to the Faculty of Humanities and Social
Science.27 Legal Studies was
placed in a new disciplinary cluster, which
included Economics and Business, as well as
Management, Hospitality and
Tourism. The Department of Legal Studies became the School of
Law and Legal
Studies within the Faculty of Law and Management, a nomenclature
that
symbolised the faculty’s new ‘professional’
character’, where law was expected to facilitate
business rather than
critique it. The general characterisation of law and legal studies as a
social
science and/or humanity was rejected altogether. Within the new
disciplinary constellation, little
sympathy was evinced for the social, the
theoretical and the critical, especially for the School’s
outstanding
strengths in feminist and criminological scholarship. These offerings began to
be
‘rationalised’, which effectively meant the dismantling of the
socio-legal curriculum. Critical
subjects were replaced with
doctrinally-oriented, atheoretical and asocial subjects, deemed to
be
appropriate for law students, as Adrian Howe dryly informs us in an
account of the handling of a
sex/crime subject proposal:
In the subject
approved by management,28 all references to theory, feminism and
violence
were excised. I conceded, just to get it through, but even then I
had to prove that I
understood the distinction between a criminology and a
criminal law elective. The message
was clear: social science perspectives
were not to impact on the law program. The subject
description was altered
quite dramatically in order, I suppose to bring it down to the
appropriate
level of numbingly dull generality...A memo from management noted that
there
was too much emphasis on ‘secondary’ (read: critical
socio-legal) readings...Law electives
had to be generalist, dull and
doctrinally orientated. The more black letter the law the
better.29
The new faculty structure also accentuated competition rather than
collaboration, so that
legal studies students from Humanities were less
warmly welcomed than they once had been.
‘LawMan’ wanted to
operate as a discrete academic and financial entity, a factor that
underscored
its resistance to the social and the critical. Economic
rationality was the new norm which involved
admitting large numbers of
students who could be processed cheaply through an old fashioned
‘sage
on the stage’ pedagogy. Commodification and credentialism rendered the
scholarly
substance incidental.
27
28
29
It is notable that
Politics and Sociology scholars were not subject to the extraordinary
disciplinary controls to which those
in Legal Studies were subjected. On the
contrary, the social critiques of prominent scholars, such as Dennis Altman,
Peter
Beilharz, Judith Brett, John Carroll and Robert Manne, were extolled.
See also the collection of essays profiling La Trobe
Humanities and Social
Science scholars, Beilharz Peter and Manne Robert (eds) Reflected Light: La
Trobe Essays Black Inc
Melbourne 2006.
‘Management’ is a
generic term that tends to have replaced ‘administration’ in the
corporatised university.
Unlike the
typical faculty of law, the School of Law
and Legal Studies, like other disciplinary units within a mega-faculty,
possessed
comparatively little autonomy. All courses were subject to
extensive scrutiny at each level of the hierarchy: school, faculty
and
central university level.
Howe Adrian ‘Law out of Context (or
who’s afraid of Sex and Violence in Legal Education?)’ (2000) 25
Alternative
Law
Journal 274 at 277–278.
10
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
6.
‘ORGANISATIONAL CHANGE’
The formal turn in favour of business and
commercial law occurred in 1999 with the release of
the Mortley Report,30
which resulted from a review of the Faculty of Law and Management by
former
Bond University Vice-Chancellor, Raoul Mortley, an Ancient Greek and
Roman
philosopher. Professor Mortley had been invited to La Trobe to conduct
a review of the
Department of Philosophy. His experience as a vice-chancellor
was cited as proof of his expertise
in management that equipped him with the
skills to review the Faculty of Law and Management.
In this capacity, he was
able to recommend the rejection of the social in favour of applied
commercial
knowledge as the appropriate direction for the School of Law and Legal
Studies.
The report was a relatively brief document, only four pages
of which were devoted to Law
and Legal Studies. It found that a
‘cognitive dissonance’ existed between staff and
students
regarding the nature of the law curriculum and its linkage with the
legal workplace. The students
interviewed were the office holders of the
student law society. They espoused the conservative
view that the La Trobe
program needed to imitate its neighbours, rather than accentuate
its
distinctiveness, in the belief that isomorphism would enhance
students’ chances in the legal
labour market. To an extent, this has
always been the case but has become more pronounced of
late. As students pay
higher fees for their education, it is inevitable that they
reconceptualise
themselves as consumers entitled to consumer rights.31
The Mortley Report acknowledged the international reputation of the School in
respect of
socio-legal scholarship, but took the view that this strength had
to be rejected because it no
longer comported with the professional and
vocational approach deemed appropriate for the
2000s. It stated that the
change of direction in favour of professional practice was
‘not
proceeding fast enough, and that ... many of the staff ... [were]
not fully equipped to teach the
law as practised [my italics].’ To
remedy this assumed failing, the Report recommended the use of
‘exit
packages’ for socio-legal scholars and their replacement with more
‘professionally-oriented’
law teachers, supplemented by the
appointment of practitioners as adjuncts. Trade practices,
competition law,
intellectual property and tax were singled out as appropriate areas
of
specialisation for new appointments. (It was apparent that the existing
feminist tax course did not
qualify).
The Mortley Report accepts
the existence of a sharp line of demarcation between Mode 1
and Mode 2
knowledge, as well as the positivistic belief that any approach other than the
self-
referentialism of technocratic legal knowledge detracts from the
calibre of the legal education
being offered. One purpose of the report was
to effect a change of direction for the School in
order to maximise the
amount of revenue that could be generated. The law discipline is not
renowned
for bringing in substantial research income, as with biotechnology, for example,
but for
producing high status graduates cheaply. The facilitation of business
in the new knowledge
economy was believed to be the most lucrative path,
rather than that represented by the School’s
strengths in socio-legal
studies, although the income-generating aim was never made
explicit.
30
31
Mortley Raoul The Faculty of Law and Management at La
Trobe University La Trobe University Melbourne 1999.
Arthurs H W ‘The
Political Economy of Canadian Legal Education’ (1998) 25(1) Journal of Law
and Society 14 at 21.
11
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
A Chair in
commercial law was recommended, which was approved and advertised
soon
afterwards. Ironically, a special emphasis on commercial law was
identified as the distinctive
contribution that Deakin University (another
Victorian university) could make to diversified
program objectives when it
applied for approval of its law program at the same time as La Trobe.
The
‘interdisciplinary study of the law in its social context’, La
Trobe’s supposedly distinctive
contribution, was to be eviscerated in
less than eight years. But institutional memories are short
and few seemed to
care any longer about distinctive contributions to ‘diversified
program
objectives’ within the prevailing neoliberal climate.
Government policy had included dramatically
cutting the operating grants of
public universities, which compelled them to embark on
entrepreneurial
activities in order to survive.32 The dramatic increase in the number of
Australian
law schools — from 12 to 30 in less than fifteen years
— was a direct result of the changed
policy.
The Mortley
Report assumed a peculiar valency as it began to be invoked
against
disfavoured socio-legal and feminist scholars who were assumed not to
satisfy the ‘professional
practice’ imperative. As a result,
several scholars resigned and departed for greener pastures. The
most
contentious incident in the wake of the Mortley Report involved the application
of the
mooted ‘exit packages’ policy to some staff in the
‘law in context area’. Six tenured La Trobe
socio-legal
academics, whose contributions to the School had enhanced its
international
reputation, were notified that they held one of six positions
identified as being in the `Legal
Studies area’ , and that four of
these positions were to be excised from the School’s
establishment. As
well as being noted scholars, they were inspiring teachers who had
attracted,
challenged and excited a generation of students. The termination
of their employment was
euphemistically referred to as ‘organisational
change’. No reasons were ever given for the action,
but it was
announced that when the University had dispensed with their services, new staff
would
be appointed, a stance that was at odds with the guidelines for
redundancies drawn up by the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU).
It is notable that five out of the six who were targeted were women, the
majority of whom
were feminist scholars. Feminist scholarship seems to evoke
a particularly virulent response on
the part of neo-conservatives.33 Not only
does it disturb the neat categories favoured by legal
positivism in a way
that echoes Mode 2 knowledge generally, but it is also personally
confronting
to those who would rather not be reminded of the ways
conventional masculinist practices
continue to prevail in the modern
university, despite its embrace of the rhetoric of EEO. While
social
liberalism once paid lip service to feminist scholarship in the name of
tolerance, the
32
33
The policy of compelling public universities to
rely on student fees and other forms of revenue became the modus
operandi of
neoliberal governments everywhere, although Australia most fervently embraced
the user pays policy. See, for
example, Marginson Simon and Considine Mark
The Enterprise University: Power, Governance and Reinvention in
Australia
Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2000.
Eg Maddox Marion God
under Howard: The Rise of the Religious Right in Australian Politics Allen &
Unwin Sydney 2005; Sawer
Marian ‘Populism and Public Choice in
Australia and Canada: Turning Equality-seekers into ‘Special
Interests’ in
Sawer
Marian and Hindess Barry (eds) Us and Them:
Anti-elitism in Australia Curtin University and Academy of Social Sciences
in
Australia Perth 2004; Summers Anne The End of Equality: Work, Babies and
Women’s Choices in 21st century Australia Random
House Australia Sydney
2003.
12
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
brutality of
neoliberalism dispensed with any need at pretence.34 To compound the sense
of
uncertainty and insecurity engendered by the retrenchments, one of the six
was told that her
inclusion was a ‘mistake’ and her name was then
removed from the list.
Although I was the associate supervisor of five
of the six persons on the list,35 I was not
consulted at any time about their
mooted inclusion. I challenged the irregularity of the procedure
and argued
that it was flawed on a number of grounds, including denial of natural justice
and sex
discrimination. Senior management then undertook to consider the
relative performance of all
staff and I departed for a period of pre-arranged
study leave in London. However, no review ever
took place and my erstwhile
colleagues left the School.
Upon my return, I continued to seek
reasons, but to no avail. The tacit assumption was
that the shift to a
commercial/applied orientation was an unequivocal good that
trumped
positional goods arising from international reputation in socio-legal
feminist scholarship, the
securing of competitive grants, the effecting of
liaisons with overseas institutions, the supervision
of the majority of the
School’s Honours and PhD students, and exemplary
undergraduate
teaching. What was most startling was the readiness of
otherwise progressive colleagues to go
along with the scapegoating. One can
only speculate as to whether this was out of fear that they
might be the next
to be targeted or for some other reason. While depoliticisation is a
noted
characteristic of neoliberalism, there seemed to have been more than
disengagement at work here.
Other measures designed to consolidate the
evisceration of the social and the
transformation of the School followed. The
School name was changed from ‘Law and Legal
Studies’ to ‘La
Trobe Law’. The arguments I adduced regarding the distinctiveness of legal
studies
to the La Trobe ‘brand name’ fell on deaf ears. Finally,
the teaching of legal studies to BA
students was transferred to the School of
Social Sciences within the Faculty of Humanities and
Social Sciences,36 along
with two of the remaining socio-legal scholars. The potential for
the
exploration of the social in social sciences was deemed to be acceptable
by university
administrators, whereas it could only wreak havoc in law.
While legal studies was being run down, the LLB programme was boosted in
accordance
with the applied focus. A transfer of student places was effected
from the BA to the LLB
program in order to augment university coffers, as law
students are funded at a higher rate
according to the Department of
Education, Science and Technology (DEST) formula. The
number of law students
admitted also sharply increased. In 1992, 70 law students were
admitted;37
34
35
36
37
Former La Trobe academic, James
McConvill, reported to The Australian that the head of the law school had sought
to
hire him as he was ‘keen to clean out the feminists’. See
Merritt Chris ‘Loopy Left forced my resignation, says
legal
academic’ The Australian 24 October 2006 at 5.
Under what was
known as the Performance Enhancement and Development Scheme (PEDS), effected
between the
NTEU and the University, all staff had a supervisor with
knowledge of their research field who would advise the staff
member about
research, publishing and teaching. The supervisor was also supposed to ensure
that the staff member met
realisable productivity aims in the coming year.
The Head of School retained the formal supervisory role, which carried
legal
obligations with it.
The School of Social Sciences also assumed
responsibility for the Bachelor of Legal Studies program.
The original
proposal had specified an annual intake of 70 EFTSU in the law programme 70
EFTSU in the BLS program,
in addition to the 1st year intake for the BA
program.
13
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
by 2006, this figure
had increased 5-fold.38 In addition, full fee-paying domestic law students
were
taken into the LLB for the first time. Following the Mortley Report,
full fee-paying Masters
degrees in Global Business, International Business
and Law, and Conflict Resolution had been
introduced in accordance with the
enterprise turn.
The ever increasing numbers of students have caused a
movement away from small group
teaching and reflective essay-writing to
lectures and exams. The passive pedagogy subtly
emphasises a focus on known
knowledge and its memorisation in accordance with the
credentialism
mentality, leaving little space for the questioning voice and the uncertainties
of the
social that a small-group, interactive pedagogy recognises. The
‘massification’ of legal education
has resulted in a similar
shift from education to training everywhere, with a correlative focus on
Mode
1 knowledge, but the change has been striking at La Trobe because of its
sometime
commitment to interdisciplinarity, theory and critique.
As
one of the few remaining socio-legal scholars at La Trobe in the post-Mortley
era, I had
some rather strange experiences myself, culminating in being
directed to move to Spanish. (One
former student asked whether it was the
department or the country that La Trobe had in mind!)
While a strong
proponent of interdisciplinarity, I felt that this was stretching things too far
in
light of my lack of Iberian knowledge and I accepted an offer from the
ANU.
During the dark years, I acknowledge the support received from
many wonderful students
— undergraduate, Honours and postgraduate
— as a source of strength and satisfaction. Their
path-breaking work in
socio-legal scholarship, especially in the areas of critical race and
gender
studies, has made a significant contribution to legal knowledge. I
congratulate them all but would
particularly like to acknowledge Wayne
Atkinson’s achievement in being the first Victorian Koori
to receive a
PhD.
7. CONCLUSION
The comparison between the experience of the American
Legal Realists and that of socio-legal
scholars at La Trobe is worth making,
although I do not wish to overstate the case, given the
status of Columbia
and Yale as prestigious Ivy League institutions. The comparison attests to
the
fact that there have been remarkably few genuine attempts in legal
education anywhere in the
common law world to realise the full potential of
law as a social science that has entailed
challenging successfully the
‘profession’s intellectual orthodoxy’.39 I do not discount
the
widespread endeavours by individuals and small groups, but stress the
novelty of a critical mass
crystallising into institutional support —
albeit briefly.
38
39
In 1991, 350 EFTSU was envisaged as the total
enrolment in the law program, not the annual intake.
Harry Arthurs’
phrase in making the same point about the paucity of revolutionaries in the
Canadian legal academy.
Arthurs above note 32 at 20.
14
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
The Realists
were reacting against the law-as-science movement that was developed
by
Langdell at Harvard in the late 19th century.40 Just as socio-legal
scholars at La Trobe were
resisting legal positivism, doctrinalism, black
letter law and the various incarnations of Mode 1
knowledge, the Realists
recognised that law could never be an exact science that was value-free.
What
they did, first at Columbia and then at Yale, was to design a curriculum that
sought to
integrate law and the social sciences. As at La Trobe, the attempt
was to be shortlived. At
Columbia, there were disputes over the role of the
social sciences and the purpose of legal
education. Yale took Realism more
seriously in appointing a team of interdisciplinary scholars,
but World War
II and the Nazi experience contributed to its collapse.41 After the War,
Lasswell
and McDougall built upon the Realist experience in their development
of ‘policy science’ at Yale.
They attempted to broaden the
curriculum to accommodate the fact that many law graduates
gravitated to
destinations other than private practice, particularly public policy
employment.
However, the initiatives of Lasswell and McDougall resulted in an
inquiry by Yale University.
They were accused of not teaching law.
Doesn’t it sound depressingly familiar?
The American Critical
Legal Studies (CLS) movement picked up where the Realists left off
in the
1970s and 80s. While the movement comprised many strands, there was unanimity
about
critiquing and questioning every facet of the legal order.42 CLS was
also subject to trenchant
opposition from the legal establishment and, in one
controversial article, a law school dean
recommended that CLS scholars should
remove themselves from law schools altogether.43 More
recently, right-wing
attacks on critical scholars have sought to sow the seeds of distrust
among
the public at large. Harvard Law School has been accused of being
populated by ‘racial
demagogues’ and
‘Marxist-inspired’ professors by conservative populists.44
Closer to home, Macquarie University, where a critical mass of scholars espoused
a CLS
approach to legal education from its inception in the mid-1970s was
subjected to vitriolic attacks
from conservative members of the legal
profession and the media.45 The Pearce Committee in its
review of Australian
legal education went so far as to recommend that Macquarie be closed
down,
despite the fact that it came closest to the critical contextual model
that Pearce actually advocated
for legal education.46 The gap between the
rhetoric and the reality rarely seems to narrow;
integration of law and the
social is exhorted, but any attempt to do more than make a tokenistic
gesture
in the direction of law and society meets with resistance.
The
impetus to return legal education to a rules-oriented approach usually emanates
from
the legal profession as soon as a law school broadens its curriculum.
Rochette and Pue recount
some examples from Canada in the 1980s and 90s of
Provincial law societies complaining
that
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
Stevens Robert Law School:
Legal Education in America from the 1850s to the 1980s University of North
Carolina Press Chapel
Hill 1983.
Kalman Laura Legal Realism at Yale
1927–1960 University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill 1986.
Kairys
David (ed) The Politics of Law: A Progressive Critique Pantheon Books New York
1982.
Carrington Paul ‘Of Law and the River’ (1984) 34 Journal of
Legal Education 222.
Eg Thomas Andrew Peyton The People v Harvard Law: How
America’s Oldest Law School turned its back on Free Speech
Encounter
Books New York 2005.
See eg Australian Journal of Law and Society, Special
Legal Education Issue 5 (1988–89).
Above note 10 in Vol 3 at
947.
15
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
students
‘don’t learn any law anymore’.47 The UK Law Society voiced
similar concerns as British
law schools moved away from a narrow doctrinal
legal education.48 Practitioners frequently have
unrealistic expectations
that law graduates possess expertise in every aspect of doctrine. If
not,
they complain that the inadequate grounding in ‘substantive
law’ renders them unfit for
admission to practice.
One of the
most scathing attacks from the professions in Australia came from
Roderick
Meagher, a former president of the NSW Bar Association and
subsequently a judge of the NSW
Supreme Court, who described contemporary
legal academics as ‘failed sociologists’ who ‘scribble
and
prattle relentlessly about such non-subjects as criminology, bail, poverty,
consumerism,
computers and racism’.49 Attacks of this kind by senior
members of the profession strike fear in
the heart of university managers
since they are the very people from whom law schools
desperately seek
approval for their programmes. The narrow ‘back to basics’ model of
legal
education is internalised by law students,50 which acts as a very
effective policing mechanism,
particularly in light of students’
increased consumer power. Credentialism, understood in
orthodox terms that
appeals to practitioners is believed to offer the best chance of
employment
and a secure future.
I recognised in my Inaugural
Address that the signs for an innovative law school were not
propitious, as
any far-reaching critique and interrogation of the legal order is perceived as a
threat
to the powerful interests served by law, whatever the prevailing
climate. While students may
explore reformism and alternative ways of
proceeding, in the end the admitting authorities
demand deference to the
basic presuppositions of law. To tinker at the edges or to move things
around
a little is acceptable, but to interrogate and destabilise those basic
presuppositions is
regarded as a form of heresy. The role of law in a
marketised political economy is very explicit. It
is expected to facilitate
business, not question it: interrogation is now an impost on business.
The
dissolution of the social can therefore be seen to be ideologically
laden. The contemporary move
away from thinking and critique to a
practice-oriented law curriculum accords with the general
neoliberal trend,
found not just in Australian law schools, but throughout the common
law
world.51
Despite the ostensible failure of the Realists and
successive waves of critical scholars
within their institutions, it is
recognised that they nevertheless exerted a significant impact on
legal
education, with the result that the teaching of law in context became normative.
By 1990, it
47
48
49
50
51
Rochette Annie and Pue W Wesley
‘“Back to Basics”? University Legal Education and 21st Century
Professionalism’
(2001) 20 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 167 at
172.
‘Law Degrees under Scrutiny’ Financial Times 6 February
2001at 7
http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/news/daily/archive.cgi?981331200
(accessed 13 October 2006); Vignaendra Sumitra Social
Class and Entry into
the Solicitors’ Profession Research Study 41 Law Society London 2001 at
6.
Quoted in Weisbrot David Australian Lawyers Longman Cheshire Melbourne
1990 at 11. For a thoroughgoing analysis of
the contradictions for legal
education inhering in the ‘failed sociologists’ sobriquet, see
Parker and Goldsmith above
note
22.
Rochette and Pue above note 47 at
188.
This finding arises from the author’s research on the Neoliberal
Legal Academy funded by the Australian Research
Council. See also James
Nickolas J ‘A Brief History of Critique in Australian Legal
Education’ (2000) 24 Melbourne
University Law Review 965.
16
THE DISSOLUTION OF THE SOCIAL IN THE LEGAL ACADEMY
looked as though the
timing was right for a radically different type of law school in Australia,
but
no one envisaged the tsunami-like effect of the Dawkins reforms (the
combination of the
creation of the unified national system of higher
education,52 together with mass education and
under-funding). As mentioned at
the outset, I am not seeking to exonerate entirely the decision-
makers who
played a role in the excision of socio-legal scholarship at La Trobe, but
suggest that
their acts became enmeshed in the web of governmentality created
by the corporatised
behemoths that are our universities. The increased reach
of managerialism caused resistance to be
ineffective.
Nevertheless, Mode 2 knowledge cannot be kept docile and tractable indefinitely.
The
unruly nature of the social causes it to bubble through whatever
apertures it can find and corrode
Mode 1 knowledge. The impending Research
Quality Framework (RQF) that is mooting the
assessment of the quality, not
just the quantity, of scholarship,53 threatens to unleash the social in
new
ways because doctrinal exegesis simply does not measure up as excellence in
research, as the
UK Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) experience has
demonstrated. The substantial
monetary rewards associated with the RQF may
induce a formal recognition of the social on the
part of university managers
once more. However, I am not holding my breath. British socio-legal
scholars
fared well only when ‘peer review’ included knowledgeable and
sympathetic peers on the
panel. Now, the RAE is proposing to revert to a
metrics-based system,54 which presumably
comports better with the
technocratic and depoliticised façade of neoliberalism.
The
contentiousness and mutability of new knowledge means that it can never
be relied upon.
The vibrancy of new incarnations of socio-legal
scholarship, such as law and literature,
postcolonial and whiteness studies,
sexuality studies, cultural studies, and law and the humanities,
may offer
more hope for a transformative vision as these new areas are exciting a new
generation
of legal studies scholars. Thus, if the RQF is not the catalyst
for change, it could be something
else, although whatever it may be, it is
likely to be fiercely resisted by the guardians of orthodoxy.
Even if the
effect of change is transient, the abrasive effect of the social on Mode 1
knowledge
cannot be ignored. It is hoped that the new generation will draw
what lessons they can from the
La Trobe experience and be inspired by a sense
of continuity and connection. Most
significantly,
52
53
54
Dawkins’ singular act was to bring
about an end to the binary system of higher education in 1988, which meant
that,
overnight, all colleges of advanced education became universities. See
Dawkins Hon J S Higher Education: A Policy Statement
(White Paper) Australian
Government Publishing Service Canberra 1988. Dawkins’ initiative was
replicated in Britain in
1992 when polytechnics were abolished.
Expert
Advisory Group for the RQF Final Advice on the Preferred RQF Model (Research
Quality Framework: Assessing the
Quality and Impact of Research in Australia
Commonwealth of Australia Canberra 2005. At the time of writing,
another
advisory committee had recommended that the focus should be on impact
rather than quality, a process that can only
‘reward mediocrity’.
See Gallagher Michael ‘Flawed RQF has lost sight of objectives’
Higher Education The
Australian 11
October 2006 at 30.
The new system is
proposed to come into effect after the 2008 RAE. It has been strongly criticised
by the academic
community, including for the way the system privileges
quantity over quality and the inappropriateness of citation indexes
in law.
See, for example, Response by the Society of Legal Scholars (SLS), Reform of
Higher Education Research Assessment and
Funding 2006
http://www.legalscholars.ac.uk/pubdocs/05/rae_sls_response.pdf Steele points out
that the Thomson
Index picks up less than 10 per cent of legal publishing,
compared with more than 90 per cent in physics and chemistry.
From the
Australian perspective, he also notes the northern hemisphere bias in the
journals indexed. See Steele Colin
‘Research with Purpose’ Higher
Education The Australian 7 June 2006.
17
THE AUSTRALIAN FEMINIST LAW JOURNAL 2006 VOLUME 25
justice demands that
they do not give up on legal education in favour of the sway of
market
orthodoxy.
18
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