(Excerpt) Jurisprudence plays an important role in John Breen and Lee Strang’s history of Catholic legal education and in their prescription for its future. Legal philosophy in general, and the natural law tradition in particular, provide a central justification for the existence of distinctive Catholic law schools. They are right to argue so. As part of the broader Catholic intellectual tradition, which emphasizes the unity of knowledge and the eternal significance of mundane practice, natural law philosophy rejects mere vocationalism. It can provide the animating form and direction of a legal education that is more than one damn thing after another in preparation for the bar
This short essay is a comment and reflection on a manuscript by Professors John Breen and LeeStrang,...
(Excerpt) Only two Marianist law schools exist in the United States. Both University of Dayton Schoo...
If you stand in the road near one of the on-campus Roman Catholic university law schools in the Unit...
(Excerpt) Jurisprudence plays an important role in John Breen and Lee Strang’s history of Catholic l...
(Excerpt) In A Light Unseen: A History of Catholic Legal Education in the United States, Professor J...
(Excerpt) As a faculty member at a Catholic law school for the past seventeen years, I have often be...
(Excerpt) What does it mean to be a Catholic law school? Where did the idea of Catholic legal educat...
(Excerpt) I am grateful to Professors Breen and Strang for their thoughtful book about Catholic lega...
Judge O’Scannlain’s address posited that America’s approximately two dozen Catholic-affiliated law s...
The symbiosis between law and morality has played a major role in universities since their formation...
I am grateful to Professors Breen and Strang for their thoughtful book about Catholic legal educatio...
This essay responds to the critique of Jesuit legal education developed by John Breen in two recent ...
Professor Rodes defines Jurisprudence as \u27\u27the legal profession\u27s account of what it is abo...
Roman Catholic universities maintain law schools for theological purposes. This Article discusses th...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
This short essay is a comment and reflection on a manuscript by Professors John Breen and LeeStrang,...
(Excerpt) Only two Marianist law schools exist in the United States. Both University of Dayton Schoo...
If you stand in the road near one of the on-campus Roman Catholic university law schools in the Unit...
(Excerpt) Jurisprudence plays an important role in John Breen and Lee Strang’s history of Catholic l...
(Excerpt) In A Light Unseen: A History of Catholic Legal Education in the United States, Professor J...
(Excerpt) As a faculty member at a Catholic law school for the past seventeen years, I have often be...
(Excerpt) What does it mean to be a Catholic law school? Where did the idea of Catholic legal educat...
(Excerpt) I am grateful to Professors Breen and Strang for their thoughtful book about Catholic lega...
Judge O’Scannlain’s address posited that America’s approximately two dozen Catholic-affiliated law s...
The symbiosis between law and morality has played a major role in universities since their formation...
I am grateful to Professors Breen and Strang for their thoughtful book about Catholic legal educatio...
This essay responds to the critique of Jesuit legal education developed by John Breen in two recent ...
Professor Rodes defines Jurisprudence as \u27\u27the legal profession\u27s account of what it is abo...
Roman Catholic universities maintain law schools for theological purposes. This Article discusses th...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
This short essay is a comment and reflection on a manuscript by Professors John Breen and LeeStrang,...
(Excerpt) Only two Marianist law schools exist in the United States. Both University of Dayton Schoo...
If you stand in the road near one of the on-campus Roman Catholic university law schools in the Unit...