A decade ago, an issue of the Association of American Law Schools\u27 Journal of Legal Education was devoted to ruminations on selecting lawyers for the twenty-first century. Although some of the papers in the Journal issue offered congratulatory messages to legal educators and the Law School Admissions Council for their work, others more critically assessed legal education and the admissions process, warning of an impending mid-life crisis caused in part by an unreflective period of maturation. Focusing on two decades of applicant explosion, affording the conscious creation of a more intellectually elite profession, \u27 a number of the authors who submitted papers wondered whether law schools and law faculty had acted responsibly in ...
Like the proverbial elephant, law school appears different when perceived from different perspective...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
Anyone who has taught in law schools for three decades or more has witnessed a paradigm shift in leg...
This law school symposium on the Twenty-First Century Lawyer reflects a fundamental shift in the foc...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
Although historically slow to change, law schools are now facing enormous pressure from educators, s...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
To answer the question posed by the conveners of this symposium, of course there is a gap between le...
This is the last Conference of the Sixth Circuit in the 1900\u27s. Though the Third Millennium techn...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
This essay reflects on the changing world of law and suggests several implications for legal educati...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
Prof. James P. White delivered the 5th annual John W. Hager lecture. The topic was legal education f...
ONLY a few years ago, some commentators seriously predicted the end of law schools as we now know th...
Like the proverbial elephant, law school appears different when perceived from different perspective...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
Anyone who has taught in law schools for three decades or more has witnessed a paradigm shift in leg...
This law school symposium on the Twenty-First Century Lawyer reflects a fundamental shift in the foc...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
Although historically slow to change, law schools are now facing enormous pressure from educators, s...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
To answer the question posed by the conveners of this symposium, of course there is a gap between le...
This is the last Conference of the Sixth Circuit in the 1900\u27s. Though the Third Millennium techn...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
This essay reflects on the changing world of law and suggests several implications for legal educati...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
Prof. James P. White delivered the 5th annual John W. Hager lecture. The topic was legal education f...
ONLY a few years ago, some commentators seriously predicted the end of law schools as we now know th...
Like the proverbial elephant, law school appears different when perceived from different perspective...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
Anyone who has taught in law schools for three decades or more has witnessed a paradigm shift in leg...