This Article discusses the statistics behind the gendered segregation of law school faculties, in which women occupy a disproportionate number of legal writing and other low-status positions, while men continue to hold a disproportionate number of tenured faculty positions. The Article explores the rationales for and against converting legal writing faculty to tenure-track, and shares one law school’s experience of doing so. The Article then suggests lessons and approaches that other schools may wish to take in converting their own legal writing faculty to tenure-track positions
Women constitute only sixteen percent of full professors, while they constitute almost fifty percent...
This article will review some of the challenges to the system of academic tenure: the efforts to ref...
This article compares standards for promotion and retention of legal writing faculty on a clinical t...
At the 2015 AALS Annual Meeting, a panel was convened under this title to discuss whether separate t...
While great strides have been made by legal writing professors in the past two decades, many law sch...
This article demonstrates that there is a gender divide on law school faculties. Women work in infer...
In this essay, I argue that viewing legal writing as a mode of gender sidelining uncovers the urgenc...
Numerous women have experienced great difficulty securing tenure at many institutions during the 198...
Women have been attending law school at approximately equal rates as men for decades and began compr...
As legal education undergoes significant changes with regard to both student enrollment and faculty ...
Although in the social sciences data can mean a narrative based on observation regulated by a method...
In this Article, the co-authors confront one of the next generation issues for underrepresented grou...
Women of color are already severely underrepresented in legal academia; as enrollment drops and lega...
Women consistently represent over fifty percent of entering law school classes, and one-third of all...
What can statistics derived from publicly available data establish about how women are being treated...
Women constitute only sixteen percent of full professors, while they constitute almost fifty percent...
This article will review some of the challenges to the system of academic tenure: the efforts to ref...
This article compares standards for promotion and retention of legal writing faculty on a clinical t...
At the 2015 AALS Annual Meeting, a panel was convened under this title to discuss whether separate t...
While great strides have been made by legal writing professors in the past two decades, many law sch...
This article demonstrates that there is a gender divide on law school faculties. Women work in infer...
In this essay, I argue that viewing legal writing as a mode of gender sidelining uncovers the urgenc...
Numerous women have experienced great difficulty securing tenure at many institutions during the 198...
Women have been attending law school at approximately equal rates as men for decades and began compr...
As legal education undergoes significant changes with regard to both student enrollment and faculty ...
Although in the social sciences data can mean a narrative based on observation regulated by a method...
In this Article, the co-authors confront one of the next generation issues for underrepresented grou...
Women of color are already severely underrepresented in legal academia; as enrollment drops and lega...
Women consistently represent over fifty percent of entering law school classes, and one-third of all...
What can statistics derived from publicly available data establish about how women are being treated...
Women constitute only sixteen percent of full professors, while they constitute almost fifty percent...
This article will review some of the challenges to the system of academic tenure: the efforts to ref...
This article compares standards for promotion and retention of legal writing faculty on a clinical t...