Our predictions of future developments may be wrong, but if we do not at least think seriously about what skills these students will need to participate in the rapidly changing legal profession, we as legal educators will be certain to disserve both our students and their future clients
Discussion about the value of a law degree has focused on the financial success of lawyers. Both def...
Why the rapidly evolving landscape for clients requires creative new moves from lawyers and the prof...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This law school symposium on the Twenty-First Century Lawyer reflects a fundamental shift in the foc...
Many books and articles in the last few years describe a profession in crisis with no shortage of ...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
The Great Recession has caused many new attorneys to question their decisions to go to law school. T...
An historic transformation is underway in the legal profession. It began about 40 years ago, but it ...
The economist Herbert Stein once remarked that if something cannot go on forever, it will stop. Over...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
This Essay examines some of the hard data available for today’s legal market and develops very basic...
A decade ago, an issue of the Association of American Law Schools\u27 Journal of Legal Education was...
In 2012, the American Bar Association (“ABA”) created the Task Force on the Future of Legal Educatio...
Discussion about the value of a law degree has focused on the financial success of lawyers. Both def...
Why the rapidly evolving landscape for clients requires creative new moves from lawyers and the prof...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This law school symposium on the Twenty-First Century Lawyer reflects a fundamental shift in the foc...
Many books and articles in the last few years describe a profession in crisis with no shortage of ...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
The Great Recession has caused many new attorneys to question their decisions to go to law school. T...
An historic transformation is underway in the legal profession. It began about 40 years ago, but it ...
The economist Herbert Stein once remarked that if something cannot go on forever, it will stop. Over...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
This Essay examines some of the hard data available for today’s legal market and develops very basic...
A decade ago, an issue of the Association of American Law Schools\u27 Journal of Legal Education was...
In 2012, the American Bar Association (“ABA”) created the Task Force on the Future of Legal Educatio...
Discussion about the value of a law degree has focused on the financial success of lawyers. Both def...
Why the rapidly evolving landscape for clients requires creative new moves from lawyers and the prof...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...