42 min listen
Ep 061: Designing for Justice, with Stanford’s Margaret Hagan
FromLawNext
ratings:
Length:
34 minutes
Released:
Jan 27, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
In the legal industry, the concept of design thinking has become synonymous with the name Margaret Hagan. Director of the Legal Design Lab at Stanford Law School’s Center on the Legal Profession, she is also a lecturer at the Stanford d.school, a ubiquitous speaker at legal conferences worldwide, and a leading advocate for making the law more accessible. After graduating from Stanford Law in 2013, she became a fellow at the d.school, where she launched the Program for Legal Tech & Design, experimenting in how design can make legal services more usable, useful and engaging. She also started the blog Open Law Lab to document legal innovation and design work. Now, she teaches a series of project-based classes, with interdisciplinary student groups tackling legal challenges through user-focused research and design of new legal products and services. She also leads workshops to train legal professionals in the design process, to produce client-focused innovation. During the past year, Hagan has played a leading role in helping Utah launch an ambitious experiment in legal regulatory reform. At the recent Innovations in Technology Conference presented by the Legal Services Corporation, Hagan sat down with LawNext host Bob Ambrogi to record a live conversation about design thinking in law and how it can enhance access to justice. NEW: Comment on this show: Record a voice comment on your mobile phone and send it to info@lawnext.com. We are now on Patreon! Subscribe to our page to be able to access show transcripts, or to submit a question for our guests. Thank you to Agile Attorney Consulting for supporting our show, and to our sponsor, MyCase.
Released:
Jan 27, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Ep 005: How Dan Linna is Indexing (and Teaching) Legal Innovation: What does legal innovation look like? For all the talk about innovation in law, who are the real innovators and what are they doing? This week’s guest, , an attorney and law professor, helps us answer that question. Linna is the creator of... by LawNext