Professor Jay Silver’s criticism of the reform proposals put forward in Brian Tamanaha’s book Failing Law Schools displays some characteristic weaknesses of American legal academic culture. These weaknesses include a tendency to make bold assertions about the value of legal scholarship and the effectiveness of law school pedagogy, while at the same time providing no support for these assertions beyond a willingness to repeat self-congratulatory platitudes about who professors are and what we do. The high costs for our students of the current scholarly expectations at American law schools are clear. What is not clear is whether those costs are worth incurring. Simply asserting that they are because the typical publications of American law fa...
The truth is that the vigor of our professional self-criticism has served as a forceful factor in th...
Paul Kahn, The Cultural Study of Law: Reconstructing Legal Scholarship. Chicago: University of Chica...
[Excerpt] I will argue that reports of law school unintentionally or intentionally misreporting a va...
Professor Jay Silver’s criticism of the reform proposals put forward in Brian Tamanaha’s book Failin...
Academic critics contend that legal scholarship is overly argumentative or too “normative,” simply s...
Debate over the impact of the economic crisis on the future of the American law school has reached a...
Brian Tamanaha\u27s book Failing Law Schools is neither sociology nor a synthesis of social science ...
It is a truth universally acknowledged that law faculty are in want of purpose. It takes a lot to ge...
Professor Brian Tamanaha’s recent book, Failing Law Schools, offers a damning critique of U.S. law s...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
Most of the current debate over academic neutrality has centered on whether the university as an ins...
I. Introduction II. A Curious Way of Doing Things III. Why Do Students Join Law Reviews? IV. Is Crit...
Professor John Valery White argues that the crisis in higher education has been framed around discom...
The American Bar Association is exerting pressure on United States law schools to improve teaching e...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
The truth is that the vigor of our professional self-criticism has served as a forceful factor in th...
Paul Kahn, The Cultural Study of Law: Reconstructing Legal Scholarship. Chicago: University of Chica...
[Excerpt] I will argue that reports of law school unintentionally or intentionally misreporting a va...
Professor Jay Silver’s criticism of the reform proposals put forward in Brian Tamanaha’s book Failin...
Academic critics contend that legal scholarship is overly argumentative or too “normative,” simply s...
Debate over the impact of the economic crisis on the future of the American law school has reached a...
Brian Tamanaha\u27s book Failing Law Schools is neither sociology nor a synthesis of social science ...
It is a truth universally acknowledged that law faculty are in want of purpose. It takes a lot to ge...
Professor Brian Tamanaha’s recent book, Failing Law Schools, offers a damning critique of U.S. law s...
The jig is up. Countless articles have exposed the disconnect between legal education and legal prac...
Most of the current debate over academic neutrality has centered on whether the university as an ins...
I. Introduction II. A Curious Way of Doing Things III. Why Do Students Join Law Reviews? IV. Is Crit...
Professor John Valery White argues that the crisis in higher education has been framed around discom...
The American Bar Association is exerting pressure on United States law schools to improve teaching e...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
The truth is that the vigor of our professional self-criticism has served as a forceful factor in th...
Paul Kahn, The Cultural Study of Law: Reconstructing Legal Scholarship. Chicago: University of Chica...
[Excerpt] I will argue that reports of law school unintentionally or intentionally misreporting a va...