Abstract

Legal education, all over the world uses a mix of practical and theoretical means to train students. For purposes of practical training, specialized legal clinics are established by legal education institutions to train the students to apply the classroom learnt law in live cases. These legal clinics serve dual purposes, first, of training students in the practical aspects of the law and second, providing access to justice to people in areas where it is difficult to get legal help and where reaching institutions of justice delivery is difficult. The pandemic situation prevailing world over now has had deep impacts in imparting legal education. The physical classrooms have turned into virtual classrooms, delivering only theoretical education and leaving doubts in the mind of students due to lack of practical training resulting from non-functioning of legal aid clinics in this situation. In order to ensure access to justice in India during the time of pandemic, the judiciary has taken recourse of virtual courts, whereby the listing and hearing of cases which require urgent hearing are done online. The same methodology has also been adopted by the National Legal Aid Service Authority by conducting virtual Lok Adalats where cases are entrusted to them . By studying the same mode of virtual courts and virtual Lok Adalats, the present paper aims to devise a working model to ensure that clinical legal education is continued in India during these times of pandemic, and that legal aid clinics work efficiently to ensure that people are not deprived of their right to legal assistance. The working model proposes a collaboration between the legal aid clinics of the universities and colleges and the justice delivery institutions to ensure dual purpose of legal aid clinics is met. The model will also be tested in the institution, and a pan India plan of action for implementing this model would be devised.

Highlights

  • Legal education is incomplete without practical training

  • By studying the same mode of virtual courts and virtual Lok Adalats, the present paper aims to devise a working model to ensure that clinical legal education is continued in India during these times of pandemic, and that legal aid clinics work efficiently to ensure that people are not deprived of their right to legal assistance

  • Practice Report inevitably means that the student takes on some aspect of a case and conducts this as it would be conducted in the real world.”3. This clinical legal education serves the dual purpose of imparting practical skills to students and ensures access to justice to the deprived and distressed sections of society

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Summary

Introduction

Legal education is incomplete without practical training. Clinical legal education is a method of ‘learning by doing’ where students are trained in the practical skills of how the law works in action. Practice Report inevitably means that the student takes on some aspect of a case and conducts this as it would be conducted in the real world.”3 This clinical legal education serves the dual purpose of imparting practical skills to students and ensures access to justice to the deprived and distressed sections of society. Clinical legal education in India has been made a mandatory part of law course curriculum and most law schools take it up in the form of legal aid clinics/cells which function in their universities/ law colleges. With universities and colleges being shut down due to the pandemic, teaching has shifted online through virtual means This has ensured that imparting theoretical knowledge is not hampered, it has posed serious obstacles in imparting practical training with most legal aid clinics/cells in universities/colleges being shut down. Clinical Legal Education in India The Indian Constitution, provides that the citizens should be provided social, economic and political justice. The Indian Constitution guarantees legal aid to citizens in case of violation of their rights. Despite strong basis for legal aid in the Preamble to the Constitution of India 5 Article 39A, Constitution of India

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