Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy

International mobility among graduate students of law presents unique challenges for the teaching and learning of Legal English. Master of Laws (LL.M.) students, for example, often bring both prior legal training and professional experience from their home jurisdiction to their graduate studies abro...

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Main Author: Hartig Alissa J.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/slgr-2016-0016
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spelling doaj-982687d71cc949bcaf18405530faa8ad2021-09-05T14:00:42ZengSciendoStudies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric2199-60592016-06-01451698610.1515/slgr-2016-0016slgr-2016-0016Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal LiteracyHartig Alissa J.0Portland State University USAInternational mobility among graduate students of law presents unique challenges for the teaching and learning of Legal English. Master of Laws (LL.M.) students, for example, often bring both prior legal training and professional experience from their home jurisdiction to their graduate studies abroad. Taking a closer look at the experience of these students as they engage with genres associated with another legal system provides insight into broader issues of intersections between language and content in English for Legal Purposes. This article draws on case studies of four LL.M students from China and Saudi Arabia, a civil law jurisdiction and an Islamic law jurisdiction, respectively, as they learn to read and write common law genres in the United States. Considering students’ experiences with these texts, the article outlines a potential framework for understanding the role of disciplinary concepts in second language legal literacy development. Specifically, the article elaborates a tentative taxonomy for disciplinary concepts that distinguishes between discourse-relevant concepts and discourse-structuring concepts in considering the interaction between language and content in ESP and CLIL for law.https://doi.org/10.1515/slgr-2016-0016disciplinary conceptsenglish for legal purposesthreshold conceptstransnational legal education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hartig Alissa J.
spellingShingle Hartig Alissa J.
Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric
disciplinary concepts
english for legal purposes
threshold concepts
transnational legal education
author_facet Hartig Alissa J.
author_sort Hartig Alissa J.
title Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
title_short Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
title_full Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
title_fullStr Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
title_full_unstemmed Intersections between Law and Language: Disciplinary Concepts in Second Language Legal Literacy
title_sort intersections between law and language: disciplinary concepts in second language legal literacy
publisher Sciendo
series Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric
issn 2199-6059
publishDate 2016-06-01
description International mobility among graduate students of law presents unique challenges for the teaching and learning of Legal English. Master of Laws (LL.M.) students, for example, often bring both prior legal training and professional experience from their home jurisdiction to their graduate studies abroad. Taking a closer look at the experience of these students as they engage with genres associated with another legal system provides insight into broader issues of intersections between language and content in English for Legal Purposes. This article draws on case studies of four LL.M students from China and Saudi Arabia, a civil law jurisdiction and an Islamic law jurisdiction, respectively, as they learn to read and write common law genres in the United States. Considering students’ experiences with these texts, the article outlines a potential framework for understanding the role of disciplinary concepts in second language legal literacy development. Specifically, the article elaborates a tentative taxonomy for disciplinary concepts that distinguishes between discourse-relevant concepts and discourse-structuring concepts in considering the interaction between language and content in ESP and CLIL for law.
topic disciplinary concepts
english for legal purposes
threshold concepts
transnational legal education
url https://doi.org/10.1515/slgr-2016-0016
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