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Full-Text Articles in Law
A Reckoning Over Law Faculty Inequality, Melanie D. Wilson
A Reckoning Over Law Faculty Inequality, Melanie D. Wilson
Scholarly Articles
Below, I review Dr. Meera E. Deo’s book, Unequal Profession: Race and Gender in Legal Academia, published last year by Stanford University Press. In Unequal Profession, Deo, an expert on institutional diversity, presents findings from a first-of-its-kind empirical study, documenting many of the challenges women of color law faculty confront daily in legal academia. Deo uses memorable quotes and powerful stories from the study’s faculty participants to present her important work in 169 readable and revealing pages. Unequal Profession begins by outlining the barriers women of color face when entering law teaching and progresses through the life cycle …
Virginia Bar Exam, September 2020, Section 1
Virginia Bar Exam, September 2020, Section 1
Virginia Bar Exam Archive
No abstract provided.
Virginia Bar Exam, September 2020 Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam, September 2020 Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam Archive
No abstract provided.
Virginia Bar Exam, July 2020, Section 1
Virginia Bar Exam, July 2020, Section 1
Virginia Bar Exam Archive
No abstract provided.
Virginia Bar Exam, July 2020, Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam, July 2020, Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam Archive
No abstract provided.
Virginia Bar Exam, February 2020, Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam, February 2020, Section 2
Virginia Bar Exam Archive
No abstract provided.
The Gaps Model And Faculty Services: Quality Analysis Through A “New” Lens, Alex Zhang, Sherry Xin Chen
The Gaps Model And Faculty Services: Quality Analysis Through A “New” Lens, Alex Zhang, Sherry Xin Chen
Scholarly Articles
Faculty service is an important function of U.S. academic law libraries. This article evaluates three types of faculty services programs using the Gaps Model to identify, analyze, and propose ways to fill four main gaps: knowledge, policy, delivery, and service quality.
A Secretary's Absence For A Law School Examination, Todd C. Peppers
A Secretary's Absence For A Law School Examination, Todd C. Peppers
Scholarly Articles
The May 5, 1893 letter from Justice Horace Gray to Chief Justice Melville Weston Fuller touches upon several different strands of Supreme Court history. To place the letter in context, we need to briefly discuss the creation of the law clerk position as well as the different functions of this first generation of law clerks. And we need to talk about the untimely death of a young Harvard Law School graduate named Moses Day Kimball.