In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is that they should focus on producing “practice ready lawyers” to meet the immediate needs of today’s legal profession. The second is that law schools should focus on training “tomorrow’s lawyers,” graduates who are able to adapt to a rapidly-changing world. The third insists that law schools are knowledge communities whose many functions include, but are not limited to, providing students with a large and liberal understanding of law that will prepare them for a variety of legal and non-legal careers and for participation as citizens in the broader economy and polity. Although the future of law schools is contested and uncertain, the author p...
This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural chan...
Blog post, “The Future of Law School“ discusses politics, theology and the law in relation to religi...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
Abstract The Law School Of The Future: How The Synergies Of Convergence Will Transform The Very Not...
One law professor takes a stab at imagining an ideal law school of the future and describing how to ...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
This Article will first review the substantial improvements in legal education and track the sources...
Dean McLaughlin reflects on the challenges of legal education in the 21st century, and Fordham\u27s ...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
This article presents a fictitious, utopian law school to challenge the assumption that legal educat...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural chan...
Blog post, “The Future of Law School“ discusses politics, theology and the law in relation to religi...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
Abstract The Law School Of The Future: How The Synergies Of Convergence Will Transform The Very Not...
One law professor takes a stab at imagining an ideal law school of the future and describing how to ...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
This Article will first review the substantial improvements in legal education and track the sources...
Dean McLaughlin reflects on the challenges of legal education in the 21st century, and Fordham\u27s ...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
This article presents a fictitious, utopian law school to challenge the assumption that legal educat...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural chan...
Blog post, “The Future of Law School“ discusses politics, theology and the law in relation to religi...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...