A
brief appraisal of the legal education in Bangladesh
Sheikh
Hafizur Rahman Karzon
Legal
education of any country is inextricably related to the legal system
of that country, because it caters to the personnel, who run the wheels
of the administration of justice. The future lawyers, judges, academicians
and law officers are being given the basic lesson of law and are being
trained up through the institute of legal education. In this era of
globalization a fairly sound legal system is sine qua non for
achieving sustainable development. Legal education, as part of broader
legal system, then becomes significant as it shoulders the sole responsibility
to educate and prepare future law incumbents.
Objectives
of legal education
If you ask any law student about the purpose of legal education, simply
s/he will answer that the purpose of legal education is to make the
students conversant with the substantive and procedural laws. Now the
question is should we be confined to so narrow a space, or should we
look at the issue from a broader point of view?
Dr. Shahdeen Malik
rightly points out that legal education in Bangladesh primarily aims
"at familiarizing students with main provisions of law and explaining
doctrinal foundations of legal regulations of society." Barrister
Amir-ul Islam, Vice-President of Bangladesh Bar Council, observed that,
"besides helping the students to master the lawyering skill, legal
education must be able to help develop inter-disciplinary approach for
building the personality to understand the society and the human situation
in a changing social order." When giving views on the legal education
of Bangladesh, Professor Jay Erstling made such a conspicuous observation,
which covers almost all the aspects of legal education. Jay Erstling,
Professor of St. Thomas University of Minnesota, USA, went writing"[a.]
Legal education must inform students about crucial social issues, including
poverty alleviation, the role of women, the environment and human rights........
legal education must not teach students simply what the current law
says, but rather it must provide students with vision and skills to
make the law more responsive to the development needs of this country.
Put simply, it must train students to be social engineers.[b]. Legal
education must not only teach students about legal theory, but must
prepare students to engage in the practice of law or law-related professions.
Students, therefore, must learn not only how to be outstanding lawyers
but also outstanding members of the judiciary, government service, NGOs
or industry. To accomplish that goal, legal education must impart skills
in research, drafting, oral communication, interviewing, interpreting,
and advocacy...."
The objectives of
legal education, therefore, should not be confined to the pedagogy of
mastering the student lawyering skills and the techniques of how to
be a good judge, as the law students need to dispose of social engineering
role. Keeping this view in mind, legal education should be orchestrated
not only to meet up the existing needs, but also the progressive demands
of the society. The existing legal education in Bangladesh is an utter
failure in fulfilling the changing needs of society, as the subjects
included in the curriculum are inadequate to cover international trade
and commerce, information technology, e-commerce, finance and banking,
foreign investments, international and municipal corporate matters,
community rights, environment, sustainable development etc.
Nature
of legal education
What should be the nature of the legal education? Should it be fully
academic or fully vocational or combination of both the two? Legal system
of Bangladesh pertains to the common law brotherhood, so its legal education
is greatly influenced by the academic character of British legal education,
though dichotomy between academic legal education and vocational legal
education still persists in England.
There is continuous
debate on the issue that to what extent the two should be combined to
prepare the students for encountering their future professional challenges.
In spite of British College and university legal education being predominantly
academic in character, they have sufficient vocational program to train
up the students to become members of Bar.
North American concept
of clinical legal education has become prominent in recent time. Clinical
legal education not only teaches substantive law, the essence of this
education is 'learning through doing'. This pragmatic approach of legal
education is very spectacular because it prepares the students to shoulder
social engineering role with their firm conviction to ensure greater
social justice. Elements of clinical legal education can be summarized
as lawyering, legal aid, ADR, public interest litigation, public legal
education, law reforms and professional ethics. Law faculties of Dhaka
University, Chittagong University, and Rajshahi University have already
introduced clinical legal education for fourth year students of those
institutions. These are some endeavors to infiltrate vocational program
into the predominantly academic legal education structure of three public
universities.
Legal
education in law colleges
Present condition of legal education imparted by the Law Colleges is
grossly disappointing, as the drop out people, who do not have the quality
to avail any satisfactory occupation, gather and get themselves admitted
into the Law Colleges. There are extensive allegations that they do
not require to attend the classes and they pass the examination by copying
erroneous note books. After getting the approval to become a member
of the Bar, finally they appear in the role of pettifoggers.
All the Law Colleges
are now affiliated with the National University, which without having
any teaching stuff of its own exercises academic control over these
colleges, prescribe curriculum, conduct examinations and awards degrees.
Graduation from any general college is admission requirement to Law
Colleges, no admission test is held, and there is no limit to the number
of students admitted. Two years course has been divided into two examination
years, preliminary and final examinations, passing of which qualifies
the students for the award of LL.B. degree. Law College students have
to sit for the examinations of 13 theoretical papers. There is no viva
voce, no tutorial, no practical course, no mock trail and moot court.
Stuffed by part time teachers, most of the Law Colleges hold their classes
at evening. Law colleges have mushroomed all over the country, and most
of them do not have their own building and sufficient library facilities.
Legal
education in public universities
The standard of legal education imparted in the public universities
is much more higher than that of Law Colleges, nevertheless public universities
lag behind not only international standard but also South Asian standard.
In spite of many limitations Dhaka University has been playing the pioneering
role in imparting legal education in Bangladesh, and trying to maintain
some standard, which is reflected in the expanding demands of law degree,
as this year around 150 candidates sat in the admission test against
1 seat of the Law Faculty of Dhaka University. Law Faculty of Chittagong
University, after its establishment in 1992, earned some reputation,
obviously credit goes to Professor Shah Alam and his dedicated young
colleagues. In addition to Dhaka and Chittagong, Law faculties of Rajshahi
University and Kushtia University are also awarding law degrees.
I want to identify
some of the gray areas of public university legal education for which
it is lagging behind international standard, those are: (i) age-old
curriculum; (ii) traditional teaching methodology; (iii) lack of accountability
of teachers; (iv) confusion regarding medium of instruction; (v) absence
of evaluation of teachers by the students. There is no disagreement
that the age-old curriculum of public universities cannot fulfill the
changing demands of society and international community. The university
law faculties should immediately review their curriculum and introduce
new subjects to meet up national and international needs. Dhaka University
Law Faculty has already taken initiative to review their existing curriculum.
Time has come to
review the traditional teaching methodology for verifying how far it
is effective to impart quality legal education. The state and university
should provide sufficient fund to train up the teachers to enhance their
academic excellence, it may be by sending the faculty to any international
training program or it may be arranged within the country. Assuming
the teachers to be self accountable, the University Order did not provide
rigorous provisions for the accountability of teachers, but time has
become ripe to review the old provisions and devise some mechanism to
ensure true accountability of teachers.
Confusion persists,
even after 32 years of the independence of Bangladesh, about the medium
of instruction, and all the universities keep both Bangla and English
open for both the teachers and students to follow. Without undermining
the role and status of Bangla, I want to propose, which is my firm conviction,
that English should be mandatory for legal education. The lectures should
be given in English, the students should be accustomed to a system where
they will speak, write, and even think in English, otherwise we cannot
elevate our standard to international level. The teachers of public
universities should think of introducing evaluation of teachers by the
students, or at least there should be a system where the resentments
of students will be ventilated in a written form and that should be
taken into consideration to minimize the present anomalies of legal
education.
Concluding
remark
We are looking forward to establishing an effective legal system and
egalitarian social order, overhaul of legal education and its reconstruction
may usher in new hopes and prospects.
Hafizur
Rahman Karzon is a Lecturer, Department of Law, Dhaka University.