Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Legal Education Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law

Vanderbilt University Law School

Discipline
Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Legal Education

The Dedication, Harvie Branscomb Chancellor Emeritus Dec 1963

The Dedication, Harvie Branscomb Chancellor Emeritus

Vanderbilt Law Review

This is a day of rejoicing for all of those who love this University, for those who know the quality of this School, and for those who are aware of the role which a great school of law can play in the progress of this southern region. We are grateful to all of you for coming to help us celebrate this accomplishment, especially grateful to those of you who bring greetings from other schools of law, and for those of you who have had a part in this program and will have a part in it this morning. This day …


Legal Education And The Demands For Stability And Change Through Law, John W. Wade Dec 1963

Legal Education And The Demands For Stability And Change Through Law, John W. Wade

Vanderbilt Law Review

Our theme for this dedication program is "Stability and Change Through Law." The general plan has been to give consideration, first, to the demands made upon law and legal institutions to meet the basic social needs for security and order and to reach out toward the fuller realization of national ideals, while adapting to the stresses brought on by science, technology, and changing political, economic,and social patterns; and second, to the responses of law and legal institutions to these demands. The treatments of the law's response considered not only what has been done in the past and what is being …


Law And Liberal Education, Jacob Weissman Mar 1962

Law And Liberal Education, Jacob Weissman

Vanderbilt Law Review

Law, says the author, can be a useful tool in the building of a liberal education. Uniquely combining the study of past experience with the solving of present day problems, law study could very well supplement or replace traditional undergraduate courses in humanities and history of Western civilization. Nothing that thus far such changes have been made primarily at a few schools of business, the author discusses the advantages of similar use of law for liberal education in any undergraduate curriculum and, eventually, in the law schools.