Professor Brian Tamanaha’s recent book, Failing Law Schools, offers a damning critique of U.S. law schools from law students’ economic perspective – especially students at non-elite law schools with diminishing access to corporate law jobs. According to Tamanaha, “the current economic barrier to a legal career is one of the most important social justice issues of our age.” Yet U.S. law schools have bigger problems than the contraction of entry-level hiring by large law firms; and law school faculty, deans, and regulators have duties to other stakeholders, in addition to students. This review criticizes Tamanaha’s analysis, and his prescriptions for reform going forward, as a dangerous diversion from a more ambitious and disruptive critique
A fundamental obstacle to the success of legal education’s practice readiness movement is the “bifur...
Law school is more than a professional training ground. Our graduates play a special and privileged ...
Legal education is ripe for disruption because the legal profession and the law itself are ripe for ...
Debate over the impact of the economic crisis on the future of the American law school has reached a...
Brian Tamanaha\u27s book Failing Law Schools is neither sociology nor a synthesis of social science ...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
It is a truth universally acknowledged that law faculty are in want of purpose. It takes a lot to ge...
These are trying times for legal educators. In 2011, the New York Times ran a year-long series of em...
American law schools are an integral part of a vertically integrated system of production in which t...
Professor Jay Silver’s criticism of the reform proposals put forward in Brian Tamanaha’s book Failin...
We are familiar with the reports documenting the downturn in legal employment of new law graduates a...
In January 2012, law professors from across the country arrived in Washington, D.C., for the annual ...
Contemporary critiques of legal education abound. This arises from what can be described as a perfec...
It is true that the recession of 2008–2009 seriously undermined the job market for both new and expe...
The title of my talk, “Legal Education Reconsidered,” is not meant to suggest that legal education n...
A fundamental obstacle to the success of legal education’s practice readiness movement is the “bifur...
Law school is more than a professional training ground. Our graduates play a special and privileged ...
Legal education is ripe for disruption because the legal profession and the law itself are ripe for ...
Debate over the impact of the economic crisis on the future of the American law school has reached a...
Brian Tamanaha\u27s book Failing Law Schools is neither sociology nor a synthesis of social science ...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
It is a truth universally acknowledged that law faculty are in want of purpose. It takes a lot to ge...
These are trying times for legal educators. In 2011, the New York Times ran a year-long series of em...
American law schools are an integral part of a vertically integrated system of production in which t...
Professor Jay Silver’s criticism of the reform proposals put forward in Brian Tamanaha’s book Failin...
We are familiar with the reports documenting the downturn in legal employment of new law graduates a...
In January 2012, law professors from across the country arrived in Washington, D.C., for the annual ...
Contemporary critiques of legal education abound. This arises from what can be described as a perfec...
It is true that the recession of 2008–2009 seriously undermined the job market for both new and expe...
The title of my talk, “Legal Education Reconsidered,” is not meant to suggest that legal education n...
A fundamental obstacle to the success of legal education’s practice readiness movement is the “bifur...
Law school is more than a professional training ground. Our graduates play a special and privileged ...
Legal education is ripe for disruption because the legal profession and the law itself are ripe for ...