This Essay seeks to answer the question \u27What is Poverty Law\u27? It does this in two parts. First, it examines the surge in property law courses in the 1960\u27s and 70\u27s and the purpose these early courses were intended to serve. In the second section the Essay asks and the author asks what the history suggests about poverty law in the law school curriculum today and in the future
It is 50 years since Stephen Wexler’s essay, Practicing Law for Poor People, was published. By any r...
This introductory essay questions putting nearly all effort into social policywhich has failed to re...
This Poverty Law Issue provides testimony as to why and how the legal profession, the government, an...
This Essay seeks to answer the question \u27What is Poverty Law\u27? It does this in two parts. Fi...
This essay argues that poverty law can and should be a part of the law school curriculum. If the law...
This Essay argues that the current trend focusing on the law and economics theory does a disservice ...
What should law students learn about poverty and its relationship to law? What is the doctrinal or t...
This Essay argues that poverty and inequality issues should be integrated into first-year civil proc...
Linking critical legal thinking to constitutional scholarship and a practical tradition of US lawye...
The emergence of poverty as a social issue has exposed the parochialism of legal education and the e...
This author argues that poverty advocates who are willing to carefully attend to their law school’s ...
This article describes the origin and sources of the author\u27s jurisprudential doctrine, and his a...
The Poverty Law Canon takes readers into the lives of the clients and lawyers who brought critical p...
Despite draconian cuts and restrictions in Federal funding for the Legal Services Corporation, the c...
This Essay argues that one of the fundamental reasons the United States currently has the highest po...
It is 50 years since Stephen Wexler’s essay, Practicing Law for Poor People, was published. By any r...
This introductory essay questions putting nearly all effort into social policywhich has failed to re...
This Poverty Law Issue provides testimony as to why and how the legal profession, the government, an...
This Essay seeks to answer the question \u27What is Poverty Law\u27? It does this in two parts. Fi...
This essay argues that poverty law can and should be a part of the law school curriculum. If the law...
This Essay argues that the current trend focusing on the law and economics theory does a disservice ...
What should law students learn about poverty and its relationship to law? What is the doctrinal or t...
This Essay argues that poverty and inequality issues should be integrated into first-year civil proc...
Linking critical legal thinking to constitutional scholarship and a practical tradition of US lawye...
The emergence of poverty as a social issue has exposed the parochialism of legal education and the e...
This author argues that poverty advocates who are willing to carefully attend to their law school’s ...
This article describes the origin and sources of the author\u27s jurisprudential doctrine, and his a...
The Poverty Law Canon takes readers into the lives of the clients and lawyers who brought critical p...
Despite draconian cuts and restrictions in Federal funding for the Legal Services Corporation, the c...
This Essay argues that one of the fundamental reasons the United States currently has the highest po...
It is 50 years since Stephen Wexler’s essay, Practicing Law for Poor People, was published. By any r...
This introductory essay questions putting nearly all effort into social policywhich has failed to re...
This Poverty Law Issue provides testimony as to why and how the legal profession, the government, an...