This Article discusses four issues that have become prominent in law school accreditation as the ABA and its constituents have adjusted to modern changes in the profession, in education, and in the flow of consumers of legal education
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
The essay proceeds in several parts. Part I provides important background about student learners now...
I wish to comment on the obligation assumed by law schools, as the primary port of entry into the le...
Most of the people who want to become lawyers in the United States have to come to terms with the Am...
The American Bar Association\u27s role in accrediting and disciplining law schools has entered a new...
This Article addresses the major antitrust issues concerning ABA accreditation. The first issue pert...
The accreditation activities of the American Bar Association are under attack. From within legal aca...
In the mid-1970s, the ABA threatened to pull accreditation from the College of William & Mary’s law ...
In 1995, Dean Richard Matasar published an essay in the Journal of Legal Education entitled Perspect...
Graduation from an accredited law school is a requirement for admission to the bar in most states. A...
From Conclusions: We cannot close this report with some general remarks concerning standards of adm...
The subject of this essay is whether, and under what circumstances, the religious commitment of an i...
Five problems in legal education, much discussed recently, were posed by the Editors of this Review ...
This essay proceeds in four parts. Part II briefly examines the disengagement of law schools from th...
These are remarks made by Robert MacCrate at the T.C. Williams School of Law in October, 1992. Mr. M...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
The essay proceeds in several parts. Part I provides important background about student learners now...
I wish to comment on the obligation assumed by law schools, as the primary port of entry into the le...
Most of the people who want to become lawyers in the United States have to come to terms with the Am...
The American Bar Association\u27s role in accrediting and disciplining law schools has entered a new...
This Article addresses the major antitrust issues concerning ABA accreditation. The first issue pert...
The accreditation activities of the American Bar Association are under attack. From within legal aca...
In the mid-1970s, the ABA threatened to pull accreditation from the College of William & Mary’s law ...
In 1995, Dean Richard Matasar published an essay in the Journal of Legal Education entitled Perspect...
Graduation from an accredited law school is a requirement for admission to the bar in most states. A...
From Conclusions: We cannot close this report with some general remarks concerning standards of adm...
The subject of this essay is whether, and under what circumstances, the religious commitment of an i...
Five problems in legal education, much discussed recently, were posed by the Editors of this Review ...
This essay proceeds in four parts. Part II briefly examines the disengagement of law schools from th...
These are remarks made by Robert MacCrate at the T.C. Williams School of Law in October, 1992. Mr. M...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
The essay proceeds in several parts. Part I provides important background about student learners now...
I wish to comment on the obligation assumed by law schools, as the primary port of entry into the le...