1st Edition

Teaching Migration and Asylum Law Theory and Practice

Edited By Richard Grimes, Věra Honuskova, Ulrich Stege Copyright 2022
    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    This highly topical book demonstrates the theoretical and practical importance of the study of migration law. It outlines approaches that may be taken in the design, delivery and monitoring of this study in law schools and universities to ensure an optimum level of learning.

    Drawing on examples of best practice from around the world, this book uses a theoretical framework and examples from real clients to simulations to help promote the learning and teaching of the law affecting migrants. It showcases contributions from over 30 academics and practitioners experienced in asylum and immigration law and helps to unpick how to teach the complex international laws and procedures relating to migration between different countries and regions. The various sections of the book explore educational best practice, what content can be covered,  models for teaching and learning, strategies to deal with challenges and ways forward.

    The book will appeal to scholars, researchers and practitioners of migration and asylum law, those teaching migration law electives and involved in curriculum design, as well as students of international, common and civil law.

    Foreword United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,

    Introduction Richard Grimes, Vera Honuskova and Ulrich Stege

    Part 1: A framework for learning and teaching

    Chapter 1 The theory behind (more) effective learning and teaching.

    Richard Grimes and Simona Travnickova

    Part 2: What to teach: content and subject

    Preface

    Chapter 2 –Creating a Refugee Law Reader: from a teaching tool to a handbook

    Boldizsar Nagy

    Chapter 3 –Public interest lawyering and cosmopolitanism: a model for teaching immigration law

    Omar Madhloom

    Chapter 4Therapeutic jurisprudence in an asylum and refugee family reunion clinic

    James Marson, Katy Ferris and Anna Kawalek

    Chapter 5 –Exploring migration and migrants’ rights in clinical legal education: two case studies

    Irene Antonopoulos, Paulina Ramírez Carvajal and Miguel Ángel Ramiro Avilés

    Chapter 6 –An overview of the teaching of Refugee Law at the University of Cape Town, Law Faculty

    Fatima Khan

    Chapter 7 –Developing student research skills in migration clinics

    Shaun McCarthy and Hannah Williams

    Part 3: How to teach: teaching and learning models

    Section A – Working with real clients

    Preface

    Chapter 8 –Learning and teaching immigration law through experience: law school clinical programs

    Richard Boswell, Megan Ballard and Stacy Caplow

    Chapter 9 –Developing a regional service for asylum seekers

    Petronilla Ruth Sylvester, Carolina Moreno Velásquez and Gracy Pelacani,

    Chapter 10 –Teaching clinic within a practice of injustice:  what clinical legal education with asylum-seekers can teach Australian students about inequity.

    Mary Anne Kenny and Anna Copeland

    Chapter 11 - Meeting the needs of clients and students - two Australian case studies: Flinders Migration Clinic, and Refugee and Immigration Legal Service 

    Sanzhuan Guo and Robert Lachowicz,

    Chapter 12 – Clinical Legal Education within the European-Mediterranean asylum and migration context – inside views from Valencia and Turin.

    Ulrich Stege, Cecilia Blengino, and Andrés Gascón-Cuenca

    Chapter 13 –Clinical legal education and migration: challenges in the academy.

    Saša Zagorc,

    Chapter 14 - The StrEEt Aware Law Clinic – EU Settlement Scheme Law Clinic at the University of Edinburgh

    Rebecca Samaras

    Section B – Using simulation and other approaches

    Preface

    Chapter 15 Simulated role play: bridging the ‘knowing/doing gap’ in refugee law and policy

    Laurie Berg

    Chapter 16 Using Live Action Role-Play in teaching migration and refugee law

    Věra Honusková, Martin Faix and Kristýna Obrdlíková

    Chapter 17 Teaching refugee law through moot courts

    Bríd Ní Ghráinne:

    Chapter 18 Theoretical foundations of gaming in teaching the functioning and future of European Migration- let’s play!

    Tesseltje de Lange, Karen Geertsema and Sandra Mantu

    Chapter 19 Using real-life cases as a basis for learning: experiences from Amsterdam and Zagreb

    Iris Goldner Lang, Marcelle Reneman

    Chapter 20 Studying online: the opportunities and challenges for the teaching of migration law

    Rhonson Salim

    Part 4: Challenges, strategies and ways forward

    Preface

    Chapter 21 On building a boat (or, learning how not to teach refugee law)

    Martin Jones

    Chapter 22 The clinic as a base for holistic study.

    Ulrich Stege

    Chapter 23 The Migration Specialization programme: a laboratory for teaching migration and refugee law

    Vera Honuskova

    Conclusions

    Richard Grimes, Vera Honuskova and Ulrich Stege

    Biography

    Richard Grimes is a Solicitor who has specialised in publicly funded and pro bono cases. He is currently a Visiting Professor at Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic and at Edinburgh Law School, Scotland. He has devoted his time to developing experiential learning in universities - at home and abroad - and has published widely on the design, delivery and evaluation of legal education. 

    Věra Honusková is a Senior Lecturer in International Law at the Faculty of Law, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic where she specializes in migration and refugee law. She has published extensively in this and related fields and has established a program developing students’ knowledge, legal skills and ethical and professional values in the field of migration and refugee law using a variety of teaching methods.

    Ulrich Stege is Director of the Clinical Legal Education Programme at the International University College of Turin, Italy. In addition to his role at the IUC, he is a practicing lawyer and member of the Italian and German bars, mainly in the field of migration and asylum. He has been active in promoting clinical legal education in Europe and abroad.

    "There is perhaps no more timely topic than migration. In this volume, the editors and legal educators have packaged the what and the how - with an emphasis on workability, sustainability, and practicality. Authored by an international and interdisciplinary array of scholars and lawyers who have "lived law," the text is designed for teachers, students and anyone active in the field to study and practise in a civil or common law context, with an appreciation and application of the best clinical and other hands-on learning methods."

    Stephen A. Rosenbaum, Frank C. Newman Lecturer in Law, University of California, Berkeley