This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural changes now occurring within the legal industry. It then offers a blueprint for change - a realistic way for law schools to retool themselves in an attempt to provide our students with high quality professional employment in a rapidly changing world. Because no institution can instantaneously reinvent itself, a key element of Professor Henderson\u27s proposal is the 12% solution: approximately 12% of faculty members take the lead on building a competency-based curriculum that is designed to accelerate the development of valuable skills and behaviors prized by both legal and nonlegal employers. For a variety of practical reasons, successful impl...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural chan...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
The legal education crisis has already struck for many recent law school graduates, signaling potent...
American law schools are an integral part of a vertically integrated system of production in which t...
In his seminal article, Value Creation by Business Lawyers: Legal Skills and Asset Pricing, 94 Yale ...
Whether or not law schools are in a crisis, it is certainly true that legal education currently face...
This article identifies two interconnected problems in legal education. First, legal education and p...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
This Essay is about solutions-real solutions that law schools can deploy right now to improve the ed...
This Essay is about solutions—real solutions that law schools can deploy right now to improve the ed...
This article presents a fictitious, utopian law school to challenge the assumption that legal educat...
It is true that the recession of 2008–2009 seriously undermined the job market for both new and expe...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...
This Article discusses the financial viability of law schools in the face of massive structural chan...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
The legal education crisis has already struck for many recent law school graduates, signaling potent...
American law schools are an integral part of a vertically integrated system of production in which t...
In his seminal article, Value Creation by Business Lawyers: Legal Skills and Asset Pricing, 94 Yale ...
Whether or not law schools are in a crisis, it is certainly true that legal education currently face...
This article identifies two interconnected problems in legal education. First, legal education and p...
This paper first argues for the maintenance of the traditional first-year curriculum. It does so in...
This Essay is about solutions-real solutions that law schools can deploy right now to improve the ed...
This Essay is about solutions—real solutions that law schools can deploy right now to improve the ed...
This article presents a fictitious, utopian law school to challenge the assumption that legal educat...
It is true that the recession of 2008–2009 seriously undermined the job market for both new and expe...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
Law school applications are the lowest they‘ve been in thirty years. Law school enrollment is down s...
In this article, the author examines three visions of the future of law schools. The first vision is...