In Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching has again turned its attention to legal education. Much as it did in the early years of the last century, in the first years of this century in its Preparation for the Professions Program (“PPP”), the Carnegie Foundation is examining professional education generally. In the early twentieth century, the Carnegie Foundation published its first report in law, The Common Law and the Case Method in American University Law Schools, prepared in 1914 by Josef Redlich, an Austrian law professor. The two reports are referred to here as the PPP Legal Education Report and as the Redlich Report respectively. This Article takes three of ...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...
Both legal practice and legal education are industries, and they change over time as other industrie...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...
In Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancem...
In 1910 the Carnegie Foundation released its first study of graduate education: the Flexner report o...
The American Bar Association is going to change the accreditation standards for law schools to requi...
In 2007, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching issued a book-length report on Amer...
The Carnegie Report faults American legal education for focusing exclusively on doctrine and analyti...
"The work seems most comprehensive and still promise is made of another study 'dealing with the cont...
In the past three years, the American Bar Association, several major state bar associations, the Ass...
Legal education in America began with the apprenticeship system. If a young man wanted to become a l...
From the introduction: Law schools have a clear mission, one would think. Even if the American Bar A...
A Review of EDUCATION FOR PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY. Pittsburgh: Carnegie Press
Educating Lawyers, a new book from the Carnegie Foundation, analyzes our modern system of legal educ...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...
Both legal practice and legal education are industries, and they change over time as other industrie...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...
In Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancem...
In 1910 the Carnegie Foundation released its first study of graduate education: the Flexner report o...
The American Bar Association is going to change the accreditation standards for law schools to requi...
In 2007, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching issued a book-length report on Amer...
The Carnegie Report faults American legal education for focusing exclusively on doctrine and analyti...
"The work seems most comprehensive and still promise is made of another study 'dealing with the cont...
In the past three years, the American Bar Association, several major state bar associations, the Ass...
Legal education in America began with the apprenticeship system. If a young man wanted to become a l...
From the introduction: Law schools have a clear mission, one would think. Even if the American Bar A...
A Review of EDUCATION FOR PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY. Pittsburgh: Carnegie Press
Educating Lawyers, a new book from the Carnegie Foundation, analyzes our modern system of legal educ...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...
Both legal practice and legal education are industries, and they change over time as other industrie...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...