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By
Mihaela Vidaicu, Moldova State University Law Faculty,
Nadejda Hriptievschi, Public Defender’s Office (Chisinau) and Moldova State University Law Faculty,
Maria Mutu-Strulea, Moldova State University Law Faculty
“The main hope of a nation lies in the proper education of its youth.”
Erasmus
Introduction
This chapter proposes developing a new law professor as the key factor in reforming the law schools, given the changed legal environment and needs in Moldova. The new law professor should help law students gain knowledge, but also help them develop critical thinking and the ability to apply the law. While this is a more or less acknowledged need, how to foster the construction of such a position remains a major challenge. We suggest some possibilities in this respect: a change in policymakers’ attitudes to legal education; a change for the law professors themselves; continuing training of the entire teaching staff, not only junior members; a policy change in law professors’ remuneration; introduction of a well-conceived evaluation of the staff; and connection of the university with the law practice.
The need for a new law professor
Before the 1990s, legal education was primarily focused on building knowledge of substantive law among students. It paid little or no attention to the skills and attitudes of lawyers. One of the main reasons was perhaps market demand, which was determined by a legal system based on a very strict approach to interpretation of the law. In a system where judges had little discretion in interpreting the law and where precedent had no value, there was less need for skillful lawyers than for lawyers who knew the letter of the law very well.
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