The Justice Education Initiative:
A Plan for Strategic Development, Fundraising and Conference Planning
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GAJE Mission Statement
GAJE is GLOBAL, seeking to involve persons from as many countries in the world as
possible, avoiding domination by any single country, and especially committed to
meaningful participation from less affluent countries, institutions, and organizations. GAJE
is an ALLIANCE of persons committed to achieving JUSTICE through legal education.
Clinical education of law students is a key component of justice education, but this
organization also works to advance other forms of socially relevant legal education, which
includes education of practicing lawyers, judges, non-governmental organizations and the
lay public.
GAJE Governance
GAJE membership is open to anyone in the world who is involved in justice education. To
date GAJE has not charged membership dues. GAJE is governed by a Steering
Committee consisting of two representatives from each of 8 regions of the world (one
woman and one man) elected by the general membership at GAJE worldwide meetings
and at-large members appointed by the 16 elected representatives. The Steering
Committee meets several times a year by email to direct work conducted by GAJE
committees, working groups, and the General Secretary. With the exception of the General
Secretary, who receives a modest honorarium, all GAJE work is currently conducted by
volunteers.
GAJE Accomplishments
In the 12 years since its founding in 1996, GAJE has worked to promote justice through
education by convening four worldwide meetings on justice education: in India (1999),
South Africa (2001), Poland (2004) and Argentina (2006). These meetings were carefully
designed to be accessible and affordable for persons from developing countries; delegates
from every continent and over 50 countries have participated in one or more meeting. The
fifth worldwide meeting will take place December 7-13, 2008 in the Philippines. GAJE has
also organized regional conferences in Australasia (2002) and North America (2006) and
co-sponsored the International Conference on the Future of Legal Education held in
February 2008. GAJE operates a free email discussion forum for its members and
publishes a newsletter in both English and Spanish every other month distributed by email
and posted on the GAJE web site. These formal GAJE activities have facilitated a wide
range of cross-national collaborations, including educational exchange programs, joint
research projects, "train the trainer" workshops, teaching handbooks, curricular materials,
and multinational co-authorship of books and articles.
Launching a New Initiative
At the fourth worldwide GAJE meeting in 2006, held in Cordoba, Argentina, the
membership directed the Steering Committee to expand GAJE activities beyond its existing
successes in facilitating the exchange of information and informal collaboration by adding
strategic initiatives to support and sustain the work of GAJE members to promote justice
education in their own countries. In response the Steering Committee has strengthened
the organization's operational capacity by giving greater authority to an expanded
Executive Committee, by appointing a General Secretary, and by drawing on the GAJE
membership to form working groups that have examined issues of legal structure and
strategic development.
Having received the reports of those working groups, the GAJE Steering Committee now
announces the launching of the Justice Education Initiative (JEI) to support the efforts of
legal educators, community workers, students, lawyers, judges and civic leaders around
the world to create and sustain legal education programs that promote justice.
The JEI is a three year project. Its goal is to develop accessible and practical resources for
use in producing lawyers who are both competent and committed to work for justice in
every setting where lawyers are found. The central strategy to achieve this goal is to focus
on the institutions and processes that prepare persons to be lawyers, judges and
legally-trained civic leaders and public officials. Underpinning this strategy is the
recognition that law students and lawyers in training can themselves be valuable workers
for justice during their time of preparation. In addition, law schools and other programs to
prepare students for legal careers can also be resource centers for education of the
community, for support of efforts by non-governmental organizations, for development of
public policy, for law reform, and for continuing education of lawyers, judges, and public
officials. GAJE will particularly encourage legal education institutions to partner with
organizations that are based in and serve communities in particular need of justice
education.
There is currently very strong international interest among educators, professional bodies,
government policy makers and major foundations in reforming legal education to make it
more socially relevant and to produce lawyers with stronger commitments to professional
responsibility and public service. The GAJE Steering Committee is confident that
implementation of the JEI will support and strengthen GAJE's capacity to provide
broad-ranging support of the many aspects of justice education that are beyond the
process of lawyer preparation that is the focus of the JEI.
Implementation of the Justice Education Initiative
- Year One: July 2008 - June 2009
At the 5th Worldwide GAJE Conference to be held in the Philippines in December 2008,
a broadly representative gathering from around the world will:
- Write a definition of justice education that can be interpreted for use in the design of
academic, professional and community legal training programs.
- Examine and document examples of existing practices and/or case studies of legal
training programs from around the world that encompass and promote justice
education.
- Present, expand and "test drive" sample web-based materials that can be used to
support justice-focused legal education such as methods for teaching justice education
across a law school curriculum, materials for student exercises, legal literacy projects,
guidelines for partnership with community-based organizations, procedures for clinical
and community service educational programs, sample readings and syllabi for courses,
research and scholarship on justice education. multimedia resources, and distance
learning methodologies.
Year Two: July 2009 - June 2010
- Launch a web site to support justice-focused legal education that includes a data base
of
- institutions and organizations that support and exemplify justice education,
- model programmes of justice-focused legal education,
- experienced trainers in justice education methods,
- examples of new and innovative curriculum or program development.
Year Three: July 2010 - June 2011
- Evaluate and update web site.
- Facilitate international collaboration around justice education, such as exchange
programs involving staff and students, guest presenters and course and curriculum
sharing.
- At the 6th Worldwide GAJE Conference to be held in 2010 receive and review report on
lawyer preparation or other legal training programmes around the world that have, since
December 2008, introduced changes to their curriculums specifically to support and
promote justice education.
Approved by the GAJE Steering Committee on April 30, 2008