
Law School for Everyone
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The skills lawyers wield in courtrooms across the country are the result of years of study. As much as we'd like to cultivate these same skills, the truth is that you cannot know how a lawyer thinks and works without studying the law itself.
Now there's an easier way to get the same foundational knowledge as lawyers - without the enormous time and financial commitment. Over the span of 48 lectures, four experienced lawyers and teachers recreate key parts of the first-year law student experience, introducing you to main areas of law most every beginning student studies.
You'll start with 12 lectures on litigation and legal practice that offer eye-opening answers to many questions about the art and craft of legislation. In the second 12 lectures, you'll learn how criminal law and procedure - an area of law dramatized by countless TV shows - really works. Additional lectures investigate the civic procedures courts follow to resolve disputes about substantive rights and examine broader questions any system of litigation must address. And 12 lectures are devoted entirely to the stranger-than-fiction topic of tort law.
Enriched with famous cases from the annals of American law and powerful arguments by some of history's most successful lawyers, these lectures offer access to an often intimidating, surprisingly accessible, and civically important field.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
©2017 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2017 The Great CoursesListeners also enjoyed...




















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Excellent Law School Prep
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It was a real long book and I listened to this few months ago, so I don't remember as much but it was good for reference to understand how the US justice system works, and the trial processes.
I learnt that the appeal process is only there if there were some technicalities in the lower court's trial. Overall I felt that typically the supreme court cases felt justified and satisfactory, but the lower courts may not rule in your favor, for political reasons. It seems the lengthy legal system can be an advantage to rich people and disadvantageous to the poor. I mean, we all know this, the right lawyers can help you get away with a lot.
So it seems justice is what you're willing to pay for it. Especially in civil litigation. Also interesting to learn about the ability to cross examine each other's evidence before a trial begins with the goal of settlement. It's really interesting option because there seems to be some conflict of interests here. Mainly that it's not in the prosecution's interests to disclose the complete and whole unbiased picture, so they may (illegally and unethically) withhold evidence. This happens even at the State / Federal levels, not just civil litigations. Case in point is the minimal conviction of Jeffrey Epstein in 2008. Another is the State prosecution of two drug lab chemists' (Sonja Farak & Annie Dookhan). The state's judicial system is not always doing the right thing.
Worth the lengthy listen
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The good. This course covers a lot and in enough detail to be useful for kids in high school to me as I deal with lawyers in a Corp office.
The down side.
This is complicated material. I know I only got part of the information. I only know I will retain part of the information. And presenting historical cases that no longer apply will only cloud the information I have in my brain. I don't care that a case happen in the 1800s and then we changed the law; Then a case happened in 1900s and we changed the law; Then a case happened and the new law is .... I know being presented with background is needed for lawyers, but not for people who are not thinking about the law 99% of the time. The history should be a second course and we should divide up the criminal from tort and ....when we go over it.
I wish this was standard education for everyone
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Even though it covers only basic stuff, it is 25+ hours of basic stuff...
Great book. But looooooong
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Easy Listen for the Common Man
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I'd recommend for anyone looking for the basics
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awesome overview of the legal system
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Excellent, interesting book
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Surprisingly entertaining for such dry material
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Very well done
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