Graduation from an accredited law school is a requirement for admission to the bar in most states. Although rule-making power with regard to bar admission lies in the state supreme courts, the courts give great deference to the American Bar Association (ABA) as an accreditor of law schools. Admission requirements frequently prescribe unconditionally that an applicant must be a graduate of a law school that has been approved by the ABA. Other states require either graduation from an ABA-approved law school or some specified alternative. The few remaining states require unconditionally or as an alternative that an applicant for the bar be a graduate of an accredited or approved law school, without designating the ABA as the accrediting bo...
The new ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools (“ABA Standards”) require l...
News release announces the University of Dayton\u27s Law School was approved by the American Bar Ass...
The American Bar Association\u27s role in accrediting and disciplining law schools has entered a new...
Graduation from an accredited law school is a requirement for admission to the bar in most states. A...
The accreditation activities of the American Bar Association are under attack. From within legal aca...
If the requirements for admission to the bar had been advanced in any thing like equal degree with t...
From Conclusions: We cannot close this report with some general remarks concerning standards of adm...
Most of the people who want to become lawyers in the United States have to come to terms with the Am...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "In orde...
Law schools play a critical role in the bar certification process. They certify that graduates have ...
not have a law degree. Aspiring lawyers in the early Republic read law books, cases, or took on a fo...
This Article discusses four issues that have become prominent in law school accreditation as the ABA...
This article addresses the ABA as a source of pressure to encourage and foster professionalism educa...
Law schools have a moral and ethical obligation to society - and, to an even greater degree, to thei...
This Article addresses the major antitrust issues concerning ABA accreditation. The first issue pert...
The new ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools (“ABA Standards”) require l...
News release announces the University of Dayton\u27s Law School was approved by the American Bar Ass...
The American Bar Association\u27s role in accrediting and disciplining law schools has entered a new...
Graduation from an accredited law school is a requirement for admission to the bar in most states. A...
The accreditation activities of the American Bar Association are under attack. From within legal aca...
If the requirements for admission to the bar had been advanced in any thing like equal degree with t...
From Conclusions: We cannot close this report with some general remarks concerning standards of adm...
Most of the people who want to become lawyers in the United States have to come to terms with the Am...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "In orde...
Law schools play a critical role in the bar certification process. They certify that graduates have ...
not have a law degree. Aspiring lawyers in the early Republic read law books, cases, or took on a fo...
This Article discusses four issues that have become prominent in law school accreditation as the ABA...
This article addresses the ABA as a source of pressure to encourage and foster professionalism educa...
Law schools have a moral and ethical obligation to society - and, to an even greater degree, to thei...
This Article addresses the major antitrust issues concerning ABA accreditation. The first issue pert...
The new ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools (“ABA Standards”) require l...
News release announces the University of Dayton\u27s Law School was approved by the American Bar Ass...
The American Bar Association\u27s role in accrediting and disciplining law schools has entered a new...