Despite enormous social, legal, and technological shifts in the last century, the structure of legal education has remained largely unchanged. Part of the reason so little change has occurred is that the current model mostly “works”; it produces a professional class of lawyers to populate the ranks of law firms and government entities. At the same time, for decades, legal education researchers have considered it practically axiomatic that law school has room for improvement. In this Article, I argue that the access to justice crisis—a deficit of just resolutions to justiciable civil justice problems for everyday people—compels an overdue examination of legal education’s scope and purpose. If we assume that lawyers should have a major ro...
Harmonizing Current Threats: Using the Outcry for Legal Education Reforms to Take Another Look at Ci...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
Despite enormous social, legal, and technological shifts in the last century, the structure of legal...
The legal education crisis has already struck for many recent law school graduates, signaling potent...
Why are law schools not named schools of justice, or, at least, schools of law and justice? Of cours...
Millions of Americans lack representation for their legal problems while thousands of lawyers are un...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This article identifies two interconnected problems in legal education. First, legal education and p...
This Article begins to synthesize the literature criticizing the current state of legal education wi...
Millions of low and middle-income Americans face legal problems every day. Most cannot afford an att...
Legal education is ripe for disruption because the legal profession and the law itself are ripe for ...
Discussion about the value of a law degree has focused on the financial success of lawyers. Both def...
Drawing from the broad and varied literature on legal ethics, the paper demonstrates that legal educ...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Harmonizing Current Threats: Using the Outcry for Legal Education Reforms to Take Another Look at Ci...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
Despite enormous social, legal, and technological shifts in the last century, the structure of legal...
The legal education crisis has already struck for many recent law school graduates, signaling potent...
Why are law schools not named schools of justice, or, at least, schools of law and justice? Of cours...
Millions of Americans lack representation for their legal problems while thousands of lawyers are un...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This article identifies two interconnected problems in legal education. First, legal education and p...
This Article begins to synthesize the literature criticizing the current state of legal education wi...
Millions of low and middle-income Americans face legal problems every day. Most cannot afford an att...
Legal education is ripe for disruption because the legal profession and the law itself are ripe for ...
Discussion about the value of a law degree has focused on the financial success of lawyers. Both def...
Drawing from the broad and varied literature on legal ethics, the paper demonstrates that legal educ...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Harmonizing Current Threats: Using the Outcry for Legal Education Reforms to Take Another Look at Ci...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...