Global Legal Skills Conference
The first Global Legal Skills conference was held in 2005 at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, a specialized conference connecting legal writing professionals who had an interest in teaching international students and lawyers who spoke English as a second language.[1] The conference series was important because a growing number of lawyers and law students had begun to attend law schools in the United States and other English-speaking countries, and they needed to have special language training in Legal English and related courses.[2] The conference was founded by Professor Mark E. Wojcik of The John Marshall Law School.[3] The GLS Conference series has since grown to include legal writing faculty, international and comparative law professors, clinical faculty, linguists, librarians, judges, attorneys, court translators, law students, and scholars interested in global legal skills education.[4]
Since its inception, the conference has been held four times in Chicago, twice in Mexico, twice in Costa Rica, once in Washington D.C., and once at the University of Verona Department of Law in Italy.[5] The 2016 conference will again be held in Italy on May 24–26.[6]
The conference series now also includes presentations of the Global Legal Skills Awards for innovations in international legal skills education.[7] Awards have been presented to individual professors for their teaching and academic leadership, for outstanding scholarship and books advancing the field of global legal skills education, for the instiutional vision of law firms and other institutions with specialized training in global legal skills, and for law schools in the United States and other countries that have special international skills training programs for law students and lawyers.[8][9]
Past Conferences
- GLS-1 Chicago, USA 7–8 May 2005 | John Marshall Law School
- GLS-2 Chicago, USA 4–5 May 2007 | John Marshall Law School
- GLS-3 Monterrey, Mexico 28 February – 1 March 2008 | Facultad Libre de Derecho de Monterrey (Mexico)
- GLS-4 Washington D.C., USA 4–6 June 2009 | Georgetown University Law Center
- GLS-5 Monterrey, Mexico 25–27 February 2010 | Facultad Libre de Derecho de Monterrey (Mexico)
- GLS-6 Chicago, USA 5–7 May 2011 | John Marshall Law School
- GLS-7 San José, Costa Rica 12–14 March 2012 | Universidad de Costa Rica
- GLS-8 San José, Costa Rica 11–13 March 2013
- GLS-9 Verona, Italy 21–23 May 2014 | Università degli studi di Verona Dipartimento di Scienze Giuridiche (Italy) and The John Marshall Law School
- GLS-10 Chicago, USA 20–22 May 2015 | The John Marshall Law School, Northwestern University School of Law, and the Facultad Libre de Derecho de Monterrey (Mexico)[10]
- GLS-11 Verona, Italy 24–26 May 2016 | Università degli studi di Verona Dipartimento di Scienze Giuridiche (Italy) and The John Marshall Law School.[11]
References
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/about/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/about/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/about/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/about/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/past-conferences/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/gls-awards
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016/gls-awards
- ↑ Awards and Prizes, Chronicle of Higher Education, Mar. 25, 2016, at A33.
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2015
- ↑ http://glsc.jmls.edu/2016