Allan Bloom is a very frustrated and unhappy fellow, and his despair is evident on virtually every page of his recent best-seller, The Closing of the American Mind. Many in legal education share Professor Bloom\u27s despair, as we increasingly hear educators complain about the incursion of new ideas into the classrooms of America\u27s elite law schools. This review explores the relationship between Bloom\u27s world view and the feeling of malaise gripping American law schools
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
Against this dark narrative genre, Carel Stolker‘s new book, Rethinking the Law School, stands in sh...
An area specialist who took for his province all knowledge aboutthe United States would have much to...
Allan Bloom is a very frustrated and unhappy fellow, and his despair is evident on virtually every p...
A Review of The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impover...
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
The author, a university professor for many years, ponders the important question of what academic A...
Back in the mid-eighties, I offered a first year, second semester un-elective called American Lega...
While few would disagree with Dean Forrester\u27s statement that America is now in the midst of an a...
ONLY a few years ago, some commentators seriously predicted the end of law schools as we now know th...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
Every few years, during the past fifteen, I have made a speech or written an article expressing my v...
[Excerpt] I will argue that reports of law school unintentionally or intentionally misreporting a va...
Reprinted from Mercer Law Review (1977) with permission of the copyright holder. Copyright 1977 by W...
The title of my talk, “Legal Education Reconsidered,” is not meant to suggest that legal education n...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
Against this dark narrative genre, Carel Stolker‘s new book, Rethinking the Law School, stands in sh...
An area specialist who took for his province all knowledge aboutthe United States would have much to...
Allan Bloom is a very frustrated and unhappy fellow, and his despair is evident on virtually every p...
A Review of The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impover...
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
The author, a university professor for many years, ponders the important question of what academic A...
Back in the mid-eighties, I offered a first year, second semester un-elective called American Lega...
While few would disagree with Dean Forrester\u27s statement that America is now in the midst of an a...
ONLY a few years ago, some commentators seriously predicted the end of law schools as we now know th...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
Every few years, during the past fifteen, I have made a speech or written an article expressing my v...
[Excerpt] I will argue that reports of law school unintentionally or intentionally misreporting a va...
Reprinted from Mercer Law Review (1977) with permission of the copyright holder. Copyright 1977 by W...
The title of my talk, “Legal Education Reconsidered,” is not meant to suggest that legal education n...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
Against this dark narrative genre, Carel Stolker‘s new book, Rethinking the Law School, stands in sh...
An area specialist who took for his province all knowledge aboutthe United States would have much to...