Metadata
Title
In the Seminar Space: Navigating Graduate Teaching in Undergraduate LegalEducation
Category
graduate
UUID
eff7dc12827a442c8c8845545c3253f4
Source URL
https://journals.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/jppp/article/view/2132
Parent URL
https://journals.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/jppp
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T06:58:29+00:00
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In the Seminar Space: Navigating Graduate Teaching in Undergraduate LegalEducation

Source: https://journals.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/jppp/article/view/2132 Parent: https://journals.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/jppp

In the Seminar Space: Navigating Graduate Teaching in Undergraduate Legal Education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31273/wpqtm024

Abstract

This reflective paper examines my evolving pedagogical identity as a Graduate Teaching Assistant (GTA) within a Global North law department, focusing on the facilitation of undergraduate seminars. Grounded in Warwick Law School’s “Law in Context” philosophy, I reflect on a seminar where students critically engaged with the applicability of CEDAW in Global South contexts. This experience demonstrated how legal instruction can move beyond doctrinal delivery to become a dialogic practice shaped by lived experience, social histories, and interdisciplinary critique. Through scaffolded teaching, peer-led activities, and participatory methods, I aim to decentralise authority and foster cumulative learning across diverse student cohorts. Navigating the dual role of postgraduate student and educator involves constant negotiation between institutional expectations and my commitment to feminist-informed pedagogy. I reflect on the emotional labour required to sustain inclusive engagement, respond to student needs, and maintain care and professionalism—labour that is often invisible, unevenly distributed, and unrecognised within formal teaching structures. Drawing on engaged pedagogy and personal experience, I argue that transformative legal education depends not only on intellectual rigour but also on emotional awareness, epistemic humility, and institutional recognition of the relational work performed by early-career educators. By foregrounding the complexities of care, credibility, and co-construction, this paper affirms the pedagogical agency of postgraduate teachers and calls for more socially responsive approaches to legal education.

Author Biography

Hadijah Namyalo-Ganafa is a Ugandan lawyer and academic, currently pursuing a Global Sustainable Development PhD at the University of Warwick. Hadijah holds a Master of Laws from Cornell University, a post graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from Law Development Centre and a Bachelor of Laws from Makerere University. Hadijah holds a Digital Arts and Humanities Certificate and Associate Fellowship of the Higher Education Academy (AFHEA). She undertook a practicum at Afya na Haki in Uganda as a Global Health and Human Rights Fellow, and the fellowship is a collaboration between the University of Warwick and the University of Toronto. Hadijah’s work reflects a profound commitment to global health, gender, human rights, and access to justice. Prior to joining Warwick, Hadijah taught law at Makerere University School of Law in Kampala, Uganda, contributing to legal education and mentoring future professionals.

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Published

2025-12-09

Issue

Vol. 5 No. 1 (2025): Evolving Experiences in Postgraduate Teaching: Navigating Changing Landscapes, Practices, and Technologies

Section

Articles

License

Copyright (c) 2025 Hadijah Namyalo-Ganafa

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.