1 / 20

ENGLISH FOR LAWYERS IV

ENGLISH FOR LAWYERS IV. INTRODUCTION. Lecturer. Prof . Dr . Lelija Sočanac Office hours : Monday 16.30 – 17.30 h, Gundulićeva 10, Room 5 E-mail: lelijasocanac @ yahoo.com lelija.socanac @ pravo.hr. TIMETABLE Monday 18.00-19.30, Lecture room VIII.

nerys
Télécharger la présentation

ENGLISH FOR LAWYERS IV

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ENGLISH FOR LAWYERS IV INTRODUCTION

  2. Lecturer • Prof. Dr. LelijaSočanac • Office hours: Monday 16.30 – 17.30 h, Gundulićeva 10, Room 5 • E-mail: lelijasocanac@yahoo.com • lelija.socanac@pravo.hr

  3. TIMETABLE Monday 18.00-19.30, Lectureroom VIII • 27 Feb.: Introduction; UNIT 28: ConflictofLaws • 13 March: UNIT 29: Typesof English Civil Law • 20 March: UNIT 30: Contract • 27 March: UNIT 31: Negligence • 10 April:UNIT 32: Economic, SocialandCultural Rights (FromtheConstitutionofthe Republic of Croatia) • 24 April: UNIT 33: Formsof Business Organizationinthe United States • 8 May: UNIT 34: JudicialControlofPublicAuthorities • 15 May: UNIT 35: Police Powersin Great Britain • 22 May: Test • 29 May: Results

  4. Exam • Written test: • A) grammar (tenses, modal auxiliaries, passive...) • B) legal terms • C) translation • English IV: Units 28-36

  5. PREPARING YOUR PAPER • 1. Collect as much material as you can • 2. Organize your materials • 3. Structure your paper: • 1. Introduction • 2. Elaboration • 3. Conclusion • References

  6. STRUCTURE • Name • TITLE • Abstract • (A short summary of what you are going to write about) • 1. Introduction. 1.1. Definition 1.2. Historical Background/ or Theoretical Background 1.3. Methodology • 2. The main argument • 3. Conclusion • References: • Oakland, John (2000), British Civilization : an Introduction .- 4th ed .- London; New York : Routledge. • SUMMARY

  7. Quoting • “If the question is asked: ‘what is law in society?’ a • common response would be ‘to maintain order’. • Much public debate and political rhetoric links • ‘law’ and ‘order’. There are two problems with • this response. First it is extremely ambiguous. • There is no single concept of order, but rather a • variety of orders in relation to which the law may play • a role” (Partington 2006: 13) • References • Partington, Martin (2006), An Introduction to the English Legal System .- 3rd ed .- Oxford University Press.

  8. PARAGRAPHING • A paragraph: several sentences contained in the topic (or key) sentence • The topic sentence: usually the first one, contains the main idea or topic • The other sentences support it by adding further information or examples • A paragraph should link logically with previous and following paragraphs

  9. Exercise • A) It is mainly formal, impersonal and objective. • B) In most of these the writer is expected to include references to other writing or research • C) Academic writing is a particular kind of writing that can be recognised by its style. • D) These include essays, research reports and articles, case studies, surveys, dissertations, theses, and examination papers. • E) Other distinctive features will depend upon the specific types of academic writing

  10. PRESENTATION • 1. Think of your audience • 2. Structure your presentation: • a) Start by saying what you are going to talk about • b) focus on the most important points with good illustrative examples • c) sum up

  11. Presentation • 3. Check and practise the pronunciation of difficult words • 4. Pay attention to your intonation • 5. If possible, do not read (using notes is preferable to reading a full text) • 6. Use visual aids, or write on the blackboard to stress your point • 7. Don’t forget about your TIMING!!! (10 minutes)

  12. CHECKLIST:Preparation • Consider your audience. What are they interested in? What do they need to know? What is the best way of presenting it? • Check the equipment • Consider what visual aids you will be using • Place your materials in the order you need them for the presentation

  13. BEGINNING • Introduce yourself (Good morning/afternoon/evening. My name is...I’m going to speak to you today about...) • Make an impact – say something that will make the audience want to listen to you • Give a preview of the argument you are going to present

  14. MIDDLE • Divide speech into a few manageable points (‘I’m going to make a couple of points today. Briefly, these are...’ • Place them in a logical order • Demonstrate how each point contributes to the main theme of the presentation

  15. END • Indicate that you have reached the end of your presentation (And finally...; In conclusion...) • Summarise the key points of your presentation (‘By way of summary...’) • End with a clear, decisive statement (‘The most important effect of all this is...’)

  16. Throughout • Project your voice so that everyone can hear you • Maintain eye contact with your audience • Use visual aids to illustrate your points • Avoid contradicting yourself • Do not use vague or trivial language • Do not assert that something is true without backing it up with evidence

  17. STUDENT-MENTORS • If your English is good enough, you can help your colleagues prepare the exam • In exchange, you get the opportunity to take your English exam earlier

  18. ELECTRONIC SOURCES www.curia.eu.int (ECJ judgements) www.hmso.gov.uk www.parliament.uk www.lawreports.co.uk www.courtservice.gov.uk (court forms and judgements) www.companieshouse.org.uk www.thelawyer.com

  19. LINK-SITES www.ials.sas.ac.uk/eagle-i.htm (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) www.venables.co.uk/legal www.balii.org www.barcouncil.org.uk (The Bar Council) www.lawsociety.org.uk/home.law (The Law Society) www.law.cam.ac.uk/jurist/index.htm

  20. Tempus reference room • TMT 3 (basement) • Opening hours: Monday – Friday 10.00-14.00h

More Related