A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students
The sharp decline in levels of state-funded legal support has highlighted the importance of publicly available sources of legal information for facilitating access to justice. Mobile apps present an opportunity to provide legal information that can be targeted at particular audiences. University law...
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doaj-01821bebefda41cf8df51d62143b22432020-11-25T03:51:25ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70772020-09-0128011510.25304/rlt.v28.24342434A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with studentsHugh McFaul0Elizabeth FitzGerald1David Byrne2Francine Ryan3Law School, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UKInstitute of Educational Technology, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UKComputer Science, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UKLaw School, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UKThe sharp decline in levels of state-funded legal support has highlighted the importance of publicly available sources of legal information for facilitating access to justice. Mobile apps present an opportunity to provide legal information that can be targeted at particular audiences. University law schools, sometimes in partnership with civil society organisations, are beginning to engage their students in cross-disciplinary projects to create mobile apps, which can provide free legal information and guidance to the public.The aim of this case study was to evaluate one such project which involved the co-design of a mobile app for the purpose of disseminating information on employment law. Law, education and computing academics worked with undergraduate law students over a period of 3 months and the prototype app was reviewed by legal advice charities. The findings have implications for how universities can work across disciplines and in partnership with civil society to provide opportunities for their students to use technology to apply their disciplinary knowledge to enhance the public good.https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2434/2764mobile apppublic legal educationbricolageco-designlaw techemployability |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hugh McFaul Elizabeth FitzGerald David Byrne Francine Ryan |
spellingShingle |
Hugh McFaul Elizabeth FitzGerald David Byrne Francine Ryan A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students Research in Learning Technology mobile app public legal education bricolage co-design law tech employability |
author_facet |
Hugh McFaul Elizabeth FitzGerald David Byrne Francine Ryan |
author_sort |
Hugh McFaul |
title |
A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
title_short |
A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
title_full |
A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
title_fullStr |
A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
title_full_unstemmed |
A mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
title_sort |
mobile app for public legal education: a case study of co-designing with students |
publisher |
Association for Learning Technology |
series |
Research in Learning Technology |
issn |
2156-7077 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
The sharp decline in levels of state-funded legal support has highlighted the importance of publicly available sources of legal information for facilitating access to justice. Mobile apps present an opportunity to provide legal information that can be targeted at particular audiences. University law schools, sometimes in partnership with civil society organisations, are beginning to engage their students in cross-disciplinary projects to create mobile apps, which can provide free legal information and guidance to the public.The aim of this case study was to evaluate one such project which involved the co-design of a mobile app for the purpose of disseminating information on employment law. Law, education and computing academics worked with undergraduate law students over a period of 3 months and the prototype app was reviewed by legal advice charities. The findings have implications for how universities can work across disciplines and in partnership with civil society to provide opportunities for their students to use technology to apply their disciplinary knowledge to enhance the public good. |
topic |
mobile app public legal education bricolage co-design law tech employability |
url |
https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2434/2764 |
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