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Articles 31 - 60 of 133
Full-Text Articles in Law
Panelist, The Legacy Of James M. Landis, Daniel Coquillette
Panelist, The Legacy Of James M. Landis, Daniel Coquillette
Daniel R. Coquillette
No abstract provided.
Testing, Diversity, And Merit: A Reply To Dan Subotnik And Others, Andrea Curcio, Carol Chomsky, Eileen Kaufman
Testing, Diversity, And Merit: A Reply To Dan Subotnik And Others, Andrea Curcio, Carol Chomsky, Eileen Kaufman
Eileen Kaufman
The false dichotomy between achieving diversity and rewarding merit frequently surfaces in discussions about decisions on university and law school admissions, scholarships, law licenses, jobs, and promotions. “Merit” judgments are often based on the results of standardized tests meant to predict who has the best chance to succeed if given the opportunity to do so. This Article criticizes over-reliance on standardized tests and responds to suggestions that challenging the use of such tests reflects a race-comes-first approach that chooses diversity over merit. Discussing the firefighter exam that led to the Supreme Court decision in Ricci v. DiStefano, as well as …
In Honor Of Steven P. Frankino, John Dobbyn
Conversations At Bc Law: Representative Bobby Scott, Kent Greenfield
Conversations At Bc Law: Representative Bobby Scott, Kent Greenfield
Kent Greenfield
First of a series of interviews with public servants with connections to BC Law.
What Is The Mission Of The Catholic Law School?, Richard Garnett
What Is The Mission Of The Catholic Law School?, Richard Garnett
Richard W Garnett
Article "What is the Mission of the Catholic Law School?" by Rick Garnett in the Irish Rover. The article is part of a talk given by Prof. Garnett.
Cultivating Professional Identity & Creating Community: A Tale Of Two Innovations, Jan Jacobowitz
Cultivating Professional Identity & Creating Community: A Tale Of Two Innovations, Jan Jacobowitz
Jan L Jacobowitz
"Life isn't about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself." - George Bernard Shaw.
"When students realize that everyone has a philosophy of how to conduct their lives - even those…[who] are unconscious of the philosophy have one, just not a sound one - they can understand the importance of engaging in the process of developing a philosophy that will guide them in life and in their jobs as lawyers." - Benjamin V. Madison III.
Students enter law school to become lawyers, but what does that really mean? What are a student’s values, hopes and dreams upon entering law school? …
The Elephant In The Admissions Office: The Influence Of U.S. News & World Report On The Rise Of Transfer Students In Law Schools And A Modest Proposal For Reform, Bruce Price, Sara Star
The Elephant In The Admissions Office: The Influence Of U.S. News & World Report On The Rise Of Transfer Students In Law Schools And A Modest Proposal For Reform, Bruce Price, Sara Star
Bruce M Price
Students who perform well after the first year of law school are increasingly transferring to schools ranked higher by U.S. News to maximize their chances of getting a law firm job immediately following graduation. This phenomena raises two fundamental and understudied issues: how students make the decision to seek to transfer to a higher-ranked and higher-tier law school, and why such law schools are willing to admit transfer students into their second-year class who they were not willing to admit initially. The first issue we explore through interviews with students who transferred as well as those who could have transferred …
Mindful Ethics—A Pedagogical And Practical Approach To Teaching Legal Ethics, Developing Professional Identity, And Encouraging Civility, Jan Jacobowitz, Scott Rogers
Mindful Ethics—A Pedagogical And Practical Approach To Teaching Legal Ethics, Developing Professional Identity, And Encouraging Civility, Jan Jacobowitz, Scott Rogers
Jan L Jacobowitz
Aristotle spoke of virtue and ethics as a combination of practical wisdom and habituation—an individual must learn from the application of critical reasoning skills to experience. Perhaps one of the earliest proclamations of the value of experiential learning, the Aristotelian view, reappears throughout history and is captured once again by the Carnegie Foundation’s Report on Legal Education, which includes a call for instruction that provides practical skills and ethical grounding to complement the teaching of legal analysis. The Carnegie Report continues to play a role in the ongoing discussion of the need to reform legal education; a debate that is …
An Interview With Dean J. Rich Leonard Of Campbell Law School
An Interview With Dean J. Rich Leonard Of Campbell Law School
J. Rich Leonard
No abstract provided.
A Technological Trifecta: Using Videos, Playlists, And Facebook In Law School Classes To Reach Today’S Students, Dionne Anthon, Anna Hemingway, Amanda Smith
A Technological Trifecta: Using Videos, Playlists, And Facebook In Law School Classes To Reach Today’S Students, Dionne Anthon, Anna Hemingway, Amanda Smith
Anna P. Hemingway
Vulnerable Populations And Transformative Law Teaching: A Critical Reader, Chapter 6 - Vulnerability In Contracting: Teaching First-Year Law Students About Inequality And Its Consequences, Deborah Post, Deborah Zalesne
Vulnerable Populations And Transformative Law Teaching: A Critical Reader, Chapter 6 - Vulnerability In Contracting: Teaching First-Year Law Students About Inequality And Its Consequences, Deborah Post, Deborah Zalesne
Deborah W. Post
Traditional legal pedagogy fails to demonstrate the relationship of contract to the subordination of vulnerable populations. As a result, students rarely see the complex web of interrelationships where economic activity takes place or the legal regime that maintains it. Students are not taught how to interrogate the discourse or dismantle the systems and structures that oppress subordinated communities. This Essay describes a technique that we have developed to help students learn the meaning of law and its cultural, social, and structural significance. The traditional framing of the study of contract doctrine as one that is objective, neutral, and fair avoids …
A Search For Balance In The Whirlwind Of Law School: Spirituality From Law Teachers, Thomas Shaffer
A Search For Balance In The Whirlwind Of Law School: Spirituality From Law Teachers, Thomas Shaffer
Thomas L. Shaffer
No abstract provided.
Studies Of Legal Education: A Review Of Recent Reports, Thomas Shaffer, Robert Redmount
Studies Of Legal Education: A Review Of Recent Reports, Thomas Shaffer, Robert Redmount
Thomas L. Shaffer
No abstract provided.
Thirteen Rules For Academic Meetings, Thomas Shaffer
Thirteen Rules For Academic Meetings, Thomas Shaffer
Thomas L. Shaffer
No abstract provided.
Nourishing Justice And The Continuum: Implementing A Blended Model In An Immigration Law Clinic, Irene Scharf
Nourishing Justice And The Continuum: Implementing A Blended Model In An Immigration Law Clinic, Irene Scharf
Irene Scharf
The purpose of this Article is to describe how the new Immigration Law Clinic at Southern New England School of Law has combined attention to the School's mission of educating students and expanding justice by serving the community with the broader goal of addressing the continuing educational needs of recent law school graduates. The Clinic not only offers direct legal services to clients but also trains and mentors recently graduated local attorneys, who offer both pro bono client representation as well as student supervision. Through the Immigration Law Clinic, these attorneys are trained in both immigration law and clinical supervision. …
Time For Every Purpose Under The Heaven: Service – The National Bar Association Model, Beverly Mcqueary Smith
Time For Every Purpose Under The Heaven: Service – The National Bar Association Model, Beverly Mcqueary Smith
Beverly McQueary Smith
No abstract provided.
Introduction To The Civil Procedure Puzzle, Robert Bloom
Introduction To The Civil Procedure Puzzle, Robert Bloom
Robert Bloom
No abstract provided.
Harmonizing Current Threats: Using The Outcry For Legal Education Reforms To Take Another Look At Civil Gideon And What It Means To Be An American Lawyer, Cathryn Miller-Wilson
Harmonizing Current Threats: Using The Outcry For Legal Education Reforms To Take Another Look At Civil Gideon And What It Means To Be An American Lawyer, Cathryn Miller-Wilson
Cathryn A. Miller-Wilson
"Harmonizing Current Threats: Using the Outcry for Legal Education Reforms to Take Another Look at Civil Gideon and What it Means to be an American Lawyer," makes the argument that, like medical education, legal education should be seen as a public responsibility. With the extra government funding that would come from this view of legal education, Miller-Wilson proposes incorporating "teaching law firms" after law school for students to practice in various specialties before graduation, similar to a medical residency.
With All Due Respect, Mr. President (With William Henderson), Jeremy Paul
With All Due Respect, Mr. President (With William Henderson), Jeremy Paul
Jeremy R. Paul
No abstract provided.
Baker V. State And The Promise Of The New Judicial Federalism, Charles Baron, Lawrence Friedman
Baker V. State And The Promise Of The New Judicial Federalism, Charles Baron, Lawrence Friedman
Charles H. Baron
In Baker v. State, the Supreme Court of Vermont ruled that the state constitution’s Common Benefits Clause prohibits the exclusion of same-sex couples from the benefits and protections of marriage. Baker has been praised by constitutional scholars as a prototypical example of the New Judicial Federalism. The authors agree, asserting that the decision sets a standard for constitutional discourse by dint of the manner in which each of the opinions connects and responds to the others, pulls together arguments from other state and federal constitutional authorities, and provides a clear basis for subsequent development of constitutional principle. This Article explores …
Curriculum Reforms At Washburn University School Of Law, Jeremiah Ho, Michael Schwartz
Curriculum Reforms At Washburn University School Of Law, Jeremiah Ho, Michael Schwartz
Jeremiah A. Ho
This book chapter discusses the task of curriculum reform through the experiences of the Washburn University School of Law faculty.
Brooklyn Law School: The First Hundred Years, Jeffrey Morris
Brooklyn Law School: The First Hundred Years, Jeffrey Morris
Jeffrey B. Morris
No abstract provided.
Cat, Cause, And Kant, Richard Peltz-Steele
Cat, Cause, And Kant, Richard Peltz-Steele
Richard J. Peltz-Steele
These are precarious times in which to launch a new law school and a new law review. Yet here we are. The University of Massachusetts is now in its first year of operation with provisional ABA accreditation. This text is a foreword to the first general-interest issue of the University of Massachusetts Law Review. Now marks an appropriate time to take stock of what these institutions mean to accomplish in our unsettled legal world.
A Demanding Boss, Rodger Citron
Only Law Schools That Tackle Costs, Graduate Client-Centered Lawyers Will Survive- A Dean's View, Jeremy Paul
Only Law Schools That Tackle Costs, Graduate Client-Centered Lawyers Will Survive- A Dean's View, Jeremy Paul
Jeremy R. Paul
No abstract provided.
Developing Professional Skills: Business Associations, Michelle Harner
Developing Professional Skills: Business Associations, Michelle Harner
Michelle M. Harner
Incorporating skills training into a traditional Business Associations course is challenging. This creative and original book provides ten independent exercises designed to develop student skills in legal drafting, client interviewing and counseling, negotiation, and advocacy. Each exercise is based on fundamental legal rules and doctrines so that the book can be used on its own or as a supplemental text with any doctrinal casebook. Students are required to spend a manageable one to two hours on such tasks as outlining discussion points for major meetings and negotiations, drafting advisory letters to clients, crafting a demand letter to a board of …
Teaching Westlawnext: Next Steps For Teachers Of Legal Research, Ronald Wheeler
Teaching Westlawnext: Next Steps For Teachers Of Legal Research, Ronald Wheeler
Ronald E Wheeler
As a follow up to his earlier piece titled "Does WestlawNext Really Change Everything: The Implications of WestlawNext on Legal Research," Professor Wheeler here explores strategies for teaching students to effectively research using the WestlawNext legal research platform. He focuses on challenging law librarians and other teachers of legal research to embrace change, to innovate and to devise research exercises that highlight both the advantages and the alleged pitfalls of WestlawNext. In particular, Professor Wheeler discusses source selection, filters, addressing the volume of results, esoteric content, and Boolean searching.
The American Legal Profession In Crisis: Resistance And Responses To Change, James Moliterno
The American Legal Profession In Crisis: Resistance And Responses To Change, James Moliterno
James E. Moliterno
Reviewed by Herbert Kritzner in Law and Politics Book Review, 227-231.
Seasons & Sea Changes: Weathering The Storm, An Encouraging Tale, Linda Ammons
Seasons & Sea Changes: Weathering The Storm, An Encouraging Tale, Linda Ammons
Linda L. Ammons
Legal education is not immune to the realities of the marketplace. With declining applications, fewer jobs, and more and more demands from students, accrediting bodies, politicians, and employers (to name just a few), law schools and law deans are adjusting their expectations and programs to stay competitive and relevant. Managing the demands (realistic or not) of all of the constituencies who are a part of the greater law school universe, in good times, can be tricky. Trying to do so, when resources—some of which you control and others which you do not—are scarce can be complicated.
One thing is for …
Lessons From Positive Psychology For Developing Advocacy Skills, Nancy Schultz
Lessons From Positive Psychology For Developing Advocacy Skills, Nancy Schultz
Nancy Schultz
Advocacy skills are crucial to law students and lawyers. One of the ways law students develop those skills is in the context of lawyering skills competitions. Coaching advocacy teams is something many of us do by instinct and experience. This article explores whether there is any psychological research that might offer more systematic guidance for advocacy coaches. Positive psychology does offer some principles that suggest useful approaches to coaching. Taken together with the aforementioned instinct and experience, these principles can help coaches be more effective in training young lawyers for litigation and dispute resolution practice.