Disintermediation is a concept well-understood in almost all industries. At its simplest, it refers to the process by which intermediaries in a supply chain are eliminated, most often by digital re-engineering of process and workflow. It can often result in streamlined processes that appear more customer-focused. It can also result in the destruction of almost entire industries and occupations, and the re-design of almost every aspect of customer and client-facing activity. To date, HE and legal education in particular has not given much attention to the process. In this article I explore some of the theory that has been constructed around the concept in other industries. I then examine some of the consequences that disintermediation is having upon our teaching and learning, and on our research on legal education, as part of the general landscape of digital media churn; evaluate its effects (particularly with regard to regulation) and show how we might use aspects of it in one version of the future of legal education.
Slides based on the Editorial to a Special Issue on the subject published in The Law Teacher and edited by Maharg. Presented at the 2016 BILETA (British and Irish Law Education Technology Association) conference at the University of Hertfordshire.
Presentation to Legal Education section, Society of Legal Scholars conference, 2016, St Catherine's College, Oxford, September 2016. Authors: Paul Maharg, Dirk Rodenburg
Presentation to BILETA 2017, Universidade do Minho, co-authored with Dirk Rodenburg, Queen's University, Ontario, and Robert Clapperton, Ametros Learning.
Shared space: regulation, technology and legal education in a global context
Professor Paul Maharg
Australian National University College of Law
Abstract
The LETR Report on legal services education and training (LSET), published in June 2013, is the most recent of a series of reports dealing with legal education in England and Wales. Many of these reports do not deal directly with technology theory and use in legal education, though it is the case that the use of technology has increased substantially in recent decades. This is a pattern that is evident in reports in most other common law jurisdictions. LETR does have a position on technology use and theory, however, and it positions itself in this regard against other reports in England and Wales, and those from other jurisdictions, notably those in the USA.
In this paper I shall set out that position and contrast it with regulatory statements on technology and legal education in England, Australia and the USA. Based on a review not just of recent practical technological implementations but of the theoretical educational and regulatory literatures, I shall argue that the concept of ‘shared space’ outlined in the Report is a valuable tool for the development of technology in education and for the direction of educational theory, but most of all for the development of regulation of technology in legal education at every level.
Slides based on the Editorial to a Special Issue on the subject published in The Law Teacher and edited by Maharg. Presented at the 2016 BILETA (British and Irish Law Education Technology Association) conference at the University of Hertfordshire.
Presentation to Legal Education section, Society of Legal Scholars conference, 2016, St Catherine's College, Oxford, September 2016. Authors: Paul Maharg, Dirk Rodenburg
Presentation to BILETA 2017, Universidade do Minho, co-authored with Dirk Rodenburg, Queen's University, Ontario, and Robert Clapperton, Ametros Learning.
Shared space: regulation, technology and legal education in a global context
Professor Paul Maharg
Australian National University College of Law
Abstract
The LETR Report on legal services education and training (LSET), published in June 2013, is the most recent of a series of reports dealing with legal education in England and Wales. Many of these reports do not deal directly with technology theory and use in legal education, though it is the case that the use of technology has increased substantially in recent decades. This is a pattern that is evident in reports in most other common law jurisdictions. LETR does have a position on technology use and theory, however, and it positions itself in this regard against other reports in England and Wales, and those from other jurisdictions, notably those in the USA.
In this paper I shall set out that position and contrast it with regulatory statements on technology and legal education in England, Australia and the USA. Based on a review not just of recent practical technological implementations but of the theoretical educational and regulatory literatures, I shall argue that the concept of ‘shared space’ outlined in the Report is a valuable tool for the development of technology in education and for the direction of educational theory, but most of all for the development of regulation of technology in legal education at every level.
Presentation to the Legal Education and Scholarship: Past Present and Future Workshop in Honour of William Twining, 20.10.10. IALS, University of London.
Presentation to the Legal Education and Scholarship: Past Present and Future Workshop in Honour of William Twining, 20.10.10. IALS, University of London.
Slides used in a session on the SCI during the Legal Ethics Teaching Workshop, City University, October 2011, hosted by Clark Cunningham and Nigel Duncan.
Slides presented by John Garvey (U of New Hampshire) and Paul Maharg (Northumbria U) to Future Ed 2: Making Global Lawyers for the 21st Century, Harvard Law School, October 2010.
Seminar on the use of digital resources, particularly webcasts & podcasts, in legal education, and their effects on the design of learning and teaching.
Seminar for LERN, Legal Education Research Network, UK, @ IALS, 28 Jan 2015, on the use of new media tools and the need for digital research literacies in legal education research.
Presentation at HEA Social Sciences learning and teaching summit 'Engaging legal education'.
As part of the Higher Education Academy’s commitment to support strategic development within disciplines, this summit event provided the opportunity to bring together an expert audience to discuss and plan actions on a key area of our work.
This presentation forms part of a blog post which can be accessed via: http://bit.ly/1iv2kYu
For further details of HEA Social Sciences work relating to 'Supporting the future of legal education' please see http://bit.ly/1ezsxUf
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It also discusses how this environment creates a demand for collaboration at scale among libraries.
4.If we are to develop an understanding of culture through ‘feedba.docxtroutmanboris
4.If we are to develop an understanding of culture through ‘feedback’, what does it mean for forms of organisation, aesthetics and practice?
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Week 9: Feedback and Systems Wednesday, 13.03.2019
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6.Hacking is seen as a paradigmatic form of innovation, but also of political resistance and of contemporary knowledge politics. Working through some examples, discuss how these might come together.
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Week 4: The Hacker Wednesday, 06.02.2019
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Disintermediation and legal education
1. Disintermediation and legal education
Professor Paul Maharg
http://www.slideshare.net/paulmaharg
paulmaharg.com/slides
2. preview
1. Background research in LETR
2. Mediation / Intermediation / Disintermediation /
Reintermediation / Apomediation
3. Law school mediation
4. Three alternatives
4. Evidence base:
•four interviews conducted specifically for LETR
•a series of interviews across the profession
•his own on-going research and consultancy activities, including two extended
interviews with experts about professions outside law, six confidential discussions with
leading practitioners (including General Counsel and senior partners in major firms)
and discussions with academics and students at three seminars (one in England, one in
Holland, and one in the US).
•50 face-to-face, interviews carried out in 2012 across the professions, and on insights
gained during 2012 from five client consulting projects (three leading law firms and
two in-house legal departments). (Appendices, 1.24)
Susskind: Provocations & Perspectives,
Briefing Paper 3/2012
5. LETR & technology in liberalised legal services
• ‘regulation and technology, as the scenarios suggest, both have the
potential to transform the demand side of the market’ (para 3.6)
• There is use of ‘technology to enhance communication, information
access, data management, and workflow, particularly in conjunction with
outsourcing and commoditised practices’ (para 3.74)
• Automation vs innovation:
– ‘The capacity of technology to enable things to be done differently
rather than just more quickly, easily and/or thoroughly appears to be
underestimated by respondents.’ (para 3.88)
6. ‘Technology therefore has longer term implications for the type of legal
roles in the marketplace and may contribute to a reduction in the number
of traditional lawyers. Some of this number may be absorbed into the
kinds of new roles Susskind (2010, 2012) describes for legal information
technologists, knowledge managers and legal process analysts. Such roles
would also require new technical skills, and a greater understanding of the
potential for ICT to innovate, not just automate.’
(para 3.96)
LETR & technology in liberalised legal services
7. technology in legal education & practice
‘Technology, particularly through increasingly sophisticated forms of blended
and e-learning also has the potential to transform the delivery of LSET. One of
the questions for the LETR is therefore, how might these technologies
connect? In other words, what can those who are planning LSET learn from
the use of technology in practice?’
(para 3.86, my emphasis)
1
LETR on
tech &
legal ed
8. ‘The emergence of new online providers, like LegalZoom and Rocket Lawyer,
albeit supported by a human interface, is already indicative of the ways in
which the market may be moving. Such online providers may increasingly
challenge and substitute for traditional f2f providers, particularly as the
technology moves from ‘search engines’ to far more powerful and intuitive
“discovery platforms”.’
(para 3.94)
technology in legal education & practice
9. commercial & social awareness
‘There is also a case for including a greater understanding of the
transformative potential of information technology under this heading. It is
not sufficient to ensure that trainees or prospective trainees understand how
technology is used to facilitate current work tasks without also helping them
to understand how it can radically change, and is changing, their business
models and the way clients may access and use legal information. In this
context Richard Susskind’s (2012) suggestion that law schools should include
an optional course on developments in legal services deserves to be taken
seriously.’
(para 4.70, my emphasis)
12. intermediation
• Intermediate entity acts as a middle agent between
industry agents such as buyer & seller.
• Eg buyer- or seller- locator, advertiser, manufacturer
in a chain process
13. disintermediation
• Established middle agent is eliminated from market
position, often because role is subsumed or taken
over by the operation of digital technologies, which
operate at much lower costs.
14. reintermediation
• But e-markets have their own emergent
intermediaries – aggregation, trusted providers,
authentication agents, filtering agents, value-adding
agents, online shopping agents.
• Dis- and re- are actually constant processes in the
digital domain
16. how should we (re-)frame it?
• Mediation enables communication and representation of meaning,
involving artefacts, processes and culture:
The arrival of new information and communication technologies led to a belief that we witnessed a
decrease of the importance of mediation and the arrival of abundance. Yet, instead of the widely
predicted process of disintermediation that was supposed to accompany emerging technologies, we
are currently forced to confront a process of reintermediation, marked by new actors and methods
of disseminating information and framing reality. […] We are only on the verge of understanding
what the social implications of the new mediating forces might be […]
(Verhulst 2005)
• Disintermediation is a process or symptom within much deeper cultural
change.
17. manuscript writing: the early context, pre-
12th
century
1. Materials
– Wax tablets
– Tally sticks
– Paper
– Parchment or vellum
1. Forms of writing
– Different hands, thickness of line,
height of letters
– Early medieval scripts included scriptio continua –
theexperiencewasratherlikereadingthi
snottoodifficultthougheasierifyoutryreadingun
deryourbreathalsocalledsubvocalisationwhichi
swhatalotofscribestendedtodowhenreadingan
dwritingandofcoursenomodernpunctuation
1. Punctuation
– Marks were used at different heights in lines, eg ‘diple’ or arrowhead (for quoting
scripture), hedera or ivy leaf for start of quotations, and 7-shaped mark (end of
section)
18. the 13th
century
scholarly text
• Writers used alphabetisation,
arabic numerals, chapter divisions,
rubrics, capitals, paraph marks,
running titles
• Used compilatio – compilation of
extracts of works of authority
or auctoritas, chosen by
hierarchies of compilators
‘The late medieval book differs more from
its early medieval predecessors than it
does from the printed books of our own day.
The scholarly apparatus which we take for granted – analytical
table of contents, text disposed into books, chapters, and paragraphs,
and accompanied by footnotes and index -- originated in the
applications of the notions of ordinatio and compilatio by writers,
scribes, and the rubricators of the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth
centuries.’ (Parkes 1976, 66)
19. gloss structure and effect
• Glossators corrected textura,
commented on sources, added other
sources, and discussed hypotheticals
• Glosses were in constant flux, a better
one replacing a poorer one in the
compilation
• The effect is one of respectful criticism,
a dialogue on the page that’s full of
information, very mobile, flexible,
highly practical, very memorable.
20. working
gloss...
1. Primary textura
in the central two
columns
2. Glossa or
commentary
surrounded them,
sometimes signed
with glossator’s initials
Corpus iuris civilis, c.1285-99,
Berkeley, University of California,
Berkeley, Bancroft Library UCB
130:f1200:10,
http://tinyurl.com/6y5bva
21. working
gloss...
1. Primary textura
in the central two
columns
2. Glossa or
commentary
surrounded them, sometimes
signed with glossator’s initials
3. Compare with book &
digital finding tools
Corpus iuris civilis, c.1285-99,
Berkeley, University of California,
Berkeley, Bancroft Library UCB
130:f1200:10,
http://tinyurl.com/6y5bva
22. glossators as apomediators
Apomediation –
•Essentially the replacement of traditional intermediaries by apomediaries,
tools and peers standing by to guide consumers to trustworthy information,
or add credibility to information.
•Helps users navigate informational overload
•Uses collaboration to scale, collaborative filtering, recommender system,
allows bookmarking and scholarly folksonomies
•Sophistication of reader means that intermediaries may be preferred at
first; but as expertise grows, apomediation is needed.
•With pre-print publication, journals themselves could be disintermediated,
though publishers contesting this strongly.
24. digital scholarship & mediation
• Castells on signs and lived culture, ie real virtuality…
• BUT see Don Slater’s critique (2002) of Castell’s
dichotomisation of ‘the Net’ and ‘the Self’
• form/signs influence nature of content/reality – they
are a reality – see Latour & actor-network theory:
digital networks have rendered the real world more
visible, as complex social networks combining
humans & machines.
26. Law school mediational activity
For students
•Flexibility, collaboration more possible
•Campus less a focus as a learning platform
•Distance learning > intimate learning
•Change to the nature of data access and collaboration
27. Law school mediational activity
For the curriculum
•Diversified, customised, student-negotiated, re-
designed around policy, transaction, historical
development, ie disintermediation of the canon, eg
triclusters of subjects in PBL
•LMSs converge data but also fragment experience,
and above all cut continuity between learning
experiences in-school and beyond-school.
28. Law school mediational activity
For staff
•Academics as teachers- central role explaining law
altering to designers of learning – but still problematic
•Intermediaries diversifying, eg IT staff, course
assistants, adjunct tutors, SCs
•Digital role playing can enable reintermediation as
online coaches, practice managers, supervisors,
29. Law school mediational activity
For staff
•Law Librarians – wholly disintermediated by the
Google & wider digital revolution.
•Part of a larger pattern of disintermediation across
the profession (Brabazon 2014), and indeed libraries
themselves (cf Academic Commons model of scholarly
access)
30. Cf professional position of journalists?
The journalist of tomorrow is a professional who serves as a node in a complex
environment between technology and society, between news and analysis, between
annotation and selection, between orientation and investigation. This complex,
changing environment cannot be kept outside of journalism anymore -the journalist
does not work in ‘splendid isolation’ anymore –particularly because of the sheer
abundance of information and the fact that the publics are perfectly capable to access
news and information for themselves, as well as the fact that institutional players
(profit, governmental, non-profit, activist) are increasingly geared towards addressing
their constituencies directly instead of using the newsmedia as a go-between.
(Bardoel & Deuze 2001)
32. LETR BIALL interview…
‘[Trainees] appeared to be generally unfamiliar with paper-based resources
by comparison with digital resources. In addition they noted that trainees
seemed to depend on one-hit-only searching: in other words they did not
check thoroughly and contextually around their findings. They used Google
extensively and their searches tended to be shallow and brief. Trainees
were also increasingly unable to distinguish between the genres of legal
research tools – the difference between an encyclopaedia and a digest, for
example. They seemed to lack persistence and diligence in searching, as well
as organization. These values, that underlay the learning outcomes of the
LILT document, needed to be worked on by students. The group were
unanimous in their opinion that many academics shared the weaknesses of
students and trainees in this regard.’
33. ‘Students needed to be assessed on skills as well as
content: process needed to be audited both in
practice-based situations and in formal academic
learning, and indeed if good habits were established
early on in academic learning, supported by staff and
driven in part by assessment, then it would make the
job of practice-based librarians a lot easier.’
LETR BIALL interview…
34. • ‘The law degree was an apprenticeship of content, not of process.
• Over the last few decades the law curriculum had become ever more crowded
with more core content and extra options.
• Part of the solution to crowded curricula was better design. In particular,
academic staff needed to design with library staff in joint activities. Library staff,
in other words, needed to be more at the heart of the educational design process
with academic staff, and involved in teaching, learning and assessment. […]
• Following on from this, regulators needed to recognize the changing role of law
librarians as legal educators. Currently librarians are classified occupationally in
many institutions as ‘Clerical Staff’ or some such. This needs to change and their
role as educators and digital information curators and digital information
environment designers should be recognized.’
LETR BIALL interview…
35. future effects in legal education
• Significant shift towards apomediation in staff,
curriculum, student learning
• Major threat to law school economics and
independence from corporate publishers:
– Cost of journal subscriptions
– Corporate capture of our learning / teaching systems
– Corporate capture of digital learning content
37. example 1: curriculum design
• Education for whom, by whom, when (Harry Arthurs…)?
• Eg JD + online + PBL…?
– We have a very sparse literature on f2f PBL (eg some major studies on
Maastricht, none on York, none online)
– Curriculum needs re-designed
– Library curricular integration needs radical re-design – see the
excellent work of Emily Allbon: http://lawbore.net
– Digital technologies need re-designed to facilitate PBL collaborative
learning online
38. example 2: saturated integration of
digital epistemic communities
• See lawbore.net
• Goes beyond
portal concerns to a core
function of the law school
• Could it go further?
Of course – with radical curriculum
design that saturates learning with research and creates a
true epistemic community
39. example 3: Extreme disintermediation of
blockchain technologies
• Open technology platform
• ‘Permissionless innovation’
• Blockchain code – a shared public register of code
transactions
• Decentralized file storage
• Decentralized Autonomous Organisations (DAO)
• On-chain decentralized marketplaces for services
40. which services?
• Currencies & sub-currencies, eg Bitcoins - http://bit.ly/1nWUfyT
- decentralized digital cryptocurrencies. See www.bitcoin.org
• Almost any financial instrument
• Further, more sophisticated platforms,
eg Ethereum, www.ethereum.org
• Contracts and wills
• Savings wallets
• Online voting
• Decentralized government
• Secure messaging - http://bit.ly/1qtpvpZ
• Decentralized data feed
• Legal education
41. legal education DAO?
• Peer-to-peer comms
• Peer-to-object comms
• Could include granulated learning objects + comms system + badge
system (eg Mozilla Badges) + payment system + other decentralized
functions, using identity and reputation system as a base
• Regulation?
See regulation of VoiP, and Bitcoins itself
http://bit.ly/1jKa4Ex
42. Anderson, C.W., Makhija, A.K. (1999). Deregulation, disintermediation, and agency costs of debt: evidence from Japan. Journal
of Financial Economics, 51, 309-339.
Bardoel, J., Deuze, M. (2001). Network journalism: Converging competences of media professionals and professionalism.
Australian Journalism Review, 23, 2, 91-103. Available at: http://bit.ly/1O9g5vk
Bakk-Simon, K. (2012). Shadow Banking in the Euro Area. European Central Bank Occasional Paper, No 133.
Brabazon, T. (2014). The disintermediated librarian and a reintermediated future, The Australian Library Journal, 63, 3, 195-205.
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Hester, D.D. (1969). Financial disintermediation and policy. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1, 3, 600-17.
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