Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 1 Introduction
and
LEGAL METHODOLOGIES
Assoc. Prof. Dr. N. T. Phuong Hoa and Assoc. Prof. Dr. P.N. Thanh
CONTENT:
1. INTRODUCTION TO LEGAL
REASONING
2. LEGAL ARGUMENT
4. ORAL ARGUMENT
INTRODUCTION TO LEGAL
REASONING
I. THE STUDY OF LEGAL
REASONING
IV. PARAGRAPHING
1. CONCEPT
What is “legal
reasoning“?
1. CONCEPT
Broad sense:
“The psychological
processes undergone by
judges in reaching
decisions in the cases
before them”.
Why “judges”?
Psychological processes
comprised of:
Ideas
Beliefs
Conjectures
Hunches
Feelings
Emotions
Narrow sense:
Argument construction
3.1 Critical thinking skills
Essential skills
What is thinking?
data collected
for scientific
studies
historical
documents
Primary Source
Nelson Mandela wrote his
autobiography about events
in his life called “Long Walk
to Freedom: The
Autobiography of Nelson
Mandela”. This is a primary
document because he wrote
his first hand experiences.
Secondary source
General In legal
meaning profession
Derived from
primary source
written about provide
primary sources summaries and
analyze, interpret, interpretations of
and discuss the law and facts
information about
the primary source.
Why should we use primary
sources?
To explain how major events are
related to each other in time.
To think critically and distinguish
between facts and opinions.
To develop your own conclusions
and analyze how historical events
affect relevant parties.
Why should we use secondary
sources?
To get expert opinions in order to
evaluate what really happened.
To gain insight by examining the
same event from different
perspectives.
To form your own opinion.
To save time by reading
information collected from a
number of different sources.
Secondary Source
Examples
Books/Articles that review other
sources
COMPARISON
Primary source Secondary source
Primary or
secondary source?
3.4 Argument construction
Construction
Evaluation
Interpretation
Deconstruction
I. THE STUDY OF LEGAL
REASONING
Norman French
Characteristics of legal language
● Predictive writing:
two purposes
● framed as an argument
Well organized
Complete
Clear
Concise
Forceful
Rather than:
IV. PARAGRAPHING
1. Two goals of paragraphing