Listen up, law students: these podcasts could help you study Sharpen your legal

Author Topic: Listen up, law students: these podcasts could help you study Sharpen your legal  (Read 1766 times)

Offline riaduzzaman

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 219
  • Test
    • View Profile
Listen up, law students: these podcasts could help you study
Sharpen your legal knowledge with these six shows

 
Studying law will entail endless hours of reading case law and textbooks, but there’s no reason to limit your learning to sitting at a desk. Podcasts are an excellent way of expanding your knowledge, whether you’re in the library or strolling to the pub. Here’s our list of some of the most interesting and helpful podcasts for law undergraduates:
I Am The Law
Many students will enter their law degree with no idea of what area they’d like to work in. It’s a vast area with so many options that can leave you at a loss when choosing a specialism.
I Am The Law, produced by Law School Transparency, profiles both recent and seasoned law graduates to provide insight into their jobs. Knowing what roles are out there is hugely helpful to students; it can focus your job search, make you more knowledgeable in interview and could help lead you to a career you really wanted.
While this podcast is no substitute for making lawyer contacts in person, it can lend your studies some direction.
Thinking Like A Lawyer
Pick any topic and it probably can be viewed through a legal lens – and that’s exactly what Legal Talk Network’s podcast Thinking Like A Lawyer does.
The half-hour podcast offers entertaining discussion of the law and you might pick up some conversation starters. (Did you know that crossing a street while texting is banned in Honolulu?)
Law in Action
 
Hear Here podcast recommendations: sign up for unexpected audio pleasures
BBC Radio 4’s Law in Action series has ran since 1984 and offers in-depth analysis of legal issues raised by cases in the news. Presented by Joshua Rozenberg, the programme speaks to leading legal figures as well as people caught up in the law about how it affects their lives.
Law in Action covers legal issues from the Grenfell Tower investigation to the cross-examination techniques used in the Oscar Pistorius trial. It also deals with social issues, such as how the prison system could be improved from a legal viewpoint. It demonstrates just how broadly the arm of the law extends beyond the courtroom.
The show is broadcast 12 times a year on Tuesdays at 4pm and is repeated on Thursdays at 8pm, but the episodes are also available for download on the BBC’s website.
Sword and Scale
Sword and Scale is a polished production that covers the “dark underworld of crime” and the criminal justice system. Presented by Mike Boudet, the creepy music and clever storytelling will hook you within the first few minutes.
Through interviews with victims and perpetrators and original audio, including police tapes and news clips, Boudet tells the stories of disappearances, murders and conspiracies. It deals with the grittier side of the law: sex abuse, torture, murder. For anyone considering criminal law, this will help you find out if you’re really up to it.
TED Radio Hour
Each week, TED Radio Hour features segments of different TED talks – as well as interviews with the speakers – all sharing a common theme. Previous topics have included the source of happiness, crowdsourcing innovation, dealing with failure, the concept of time, and gene-editing.
While not law-focused per se, this podcast will broaden your knowledge on a range of interesting topics that you can pick and choose. If you want to dive deeper, TED has nearly 50 videos on law available on their website.
Up and Vanished
Aimed at those suffering Serial withdrawals, this series focuses on one case throughout the whole season – that of Tara Grinstead, a high-school teacher and former beauty queen who disappeared from her hometown in Georgia in 2005. Up and Vanished examines the case from top to bottom.
Items of evidence and an interactive map are available on the podcast’s website to help you follow the case. It’ll give you a taste of what’s it’s like to follow the progress of a live case and what makes up the bones of an investigation.

https://www.theguardian.com/law/2017/oct/13/listen-up-law-students-these-podcasts-could-help-you-study
Md.Riaduzzaman
Assistant Professor, Department of Law
Daffodil International University
Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Offline tasnim.eee

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 506
  • Test
    • View Profile
Excellent writing.