The second part of Seipp\u27s talk brought the story up to the present day, through the experiences of students and careers of graduates from the early 1900s, through the dislocations of World War Two and student protests around 1970, and to the proliferation of clinics, journals, and programs over recent decades. We learned which BU graduates founded the other Boston law schools and which founded law schools on the other side of the country and on the other side of the globe
Legal education in the early twentieth century was divided into three concurrent paths-study at one ...
Describes the impact of the GI Bill on Boston College Law School. At a pivotal time in the school\u2...
Legal education in America began with the apprenticeship system. If a young man wanted to become a l...
When BU Law opened in 1872, most new lawyers did not attend any formal classroom legal education. Pr...
In October 1872, 60 students joined the inaugural class at Boston University School of Law. The scho...
Keynote address delivered to the National Conference of Bar Examiners on April 19, 2013
A history of Boston College Law School by Todd F. Simon, who graduated from the school in 1980. Incl...
In the February number of the AMERICAN LAW REGISTER, there appeared an interesting article from the ...
Publication of the Student Bar Association of the Boston College Law School. This issue includes sev...
The origin of law schools is lost in antiquity. It is probable there were advocates in Babylonia,1 a...
This Note explores the relationship between legal education and the legal profession, and what can b...
History of the University of Michigan Law School reprinted from The Michigan Alumnus March, 1908 iss...
In a letter-to-the-editor on August 12, Brig. Gen. Rothwell H. Brown evidently saw fit to overlook s...
The 19th century saw dramatic changes in the legal education system in the United States. Before the...
In the February, 1914, number of The Alumnus, devoted in part to the Michigan Law School, some accou...
Legal education in the early twentieth century was divided into three concurrent paths-study at one ...
Describes the impact of the GI Bill on Boston College Law School. At a pivotal time in the school\u2...
Legal education in America began with the apprenticeship system. If a young man wanted to become a l...
When BU Law opened in 1872, most new lawyers did not attend any formal classroom legal education. Pr...
In October 1872, 60 students joined the inaugural class at Boston University School of Law. The scho...
Keynote address delivered to the National Conference of Bar Examiners on April 19, 2013
A history of Boston College Law School by Todd F. Simon, who graduated from the school in 1980. Incl...
In the February number of the AMERICAN LAW REGISTER, there appeared an interesting article from the ...
Publication of the Student Bar Association of the Boston College Law School. This issue includes sev...
The origin of law schools is lost in antiquity. It is probable there were advocates in Babylonia,1 a...
This Note explores the relationship between legal education and the legal profession, and what can b...
History of the University of Michigan Law School reprinted from The Michigan Alumnus March, 1908 iss...
In a letter-to-the-editor on August 12, Brig. Gen. Rothwell H. Brown evidently saw fit to overlook s...
The 19th century saw dramatic changes in the legal education system in the United States. Before the...
In the February, 1914, number of The Alumnus, devoted in part to the Michigan Law School, some accou...
Legal education in the early twentieth century was divided into three concurrent paths-study at one ...
Describes the impact of the GI Bill on Boston College Law School. At a pivotal time in the school\u2...
Legal education in America began with the apprenticeship system. If a young man wanted to become a l...