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Sheryl White's avatar

No wonder you are thinking of the Marseillaise! (One of my favourites ever since learning it in 3rd form at school). It does indeed seem as if the timing of the Auckland University Vice-Chancellor's proposal is a machination to have it progressed with as little noise and opposition as possible. I appreciate the background you have provided in your article and very much support your and others' opposition to the proposal. Aux armes, David, and Bonne Chance!

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Russell Callander's avatar

Thank you for your clear, discerning and judicious analysis. To adopt your passionate Marseillaise metaphor, bombarding of the Auckland University Vice-Chancellor’s proposal, not only builds insurmountable protective barricades protective of the Law Faculty, but leads the faithful over the ramparts to charge the core of the enemy camp. You provide a tidy, cultural, and historical context for your opposition to any “merger” of the Law and Business faculties and I agree with your identification of the motivation behind the proposal.

In his 1987 report to the New Zealand Law Society "Report on the Reform of Professional Legal Training in New Zealand” Canadian Professor Neil Gold sensibly concluded:

“Law education is both deep and varied. Because law cannot helpfully be abstracted from its social, economic and political milieu, it cannot be truly understood except in the context of human aspiration and endeavour. Yet it is also a practical subject which seeks solutions to difficult problems of policy and justice. In the best of all possible worlds it is a general legal education which prepares graduates to face and adapt to change in all aspects of their lives, but especially throughout their legal careers.”

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