Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category
No More Law School Headlines
The network decided against renewing our contract. From what I understand, the more than 1000 news stories found and linked here will stay. Thanks for stopping by, it’s been fun.
- The Two Recent Law School Graduates Who Ran This Place
UC Irvine School of Law Forms Partnership to Send Students to Guam
A proposed partnership with the University of California could pipeline local students to their brand-new innovative law school and increase the chances that graduates move here to practice law.
Irvine School of Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky and District Court of Guam Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood said they were both excited about forming a partnership that could benefit students on either side of the Pacific.
“Nothing has been thought through or decided so I’m just suggesting possibilities,” Chemerinsky said yesterday. “Guam doesn’t have a law school itself, but we could create a program to admit students from Guam to our law school.”
Tydingco-Gatewood said the University of California could allow its students to earn credits by working at the District Court of Guam.
Students who worked in Guam for a semester would be more likely to return here after they graduated, she said.
Chemerinsky was the keynote speaker at the District Court of Guam Annual District Conference yesterday. About two hundred members of Guam’s legal community packed into a ballroom to hear him speak.
[Guam PDN]
Seton Hall Law School Finds Evidence Of Cover-Up After Three Alleged Suicides At Guantanamo
On the night of June 9-10 in 2006, three prisoners held at the Guantánamo prison’s Camp Delta died under mysterious circumstances. Military authorities responded by quickly ordering media representatives off the island and blocking lawyers from meeting with their clients. The first official military statements declared the deaths not just suicides — but actually went so far as to describe them as acts of “asymmetrical warfare” against the United States.
Now a 58-page study prepared by law faculty and students at Seton Hall University in New Jersey starkly challenges the Pentagon’s claims. It notes serious and unresolved contradictions within a Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) report — which was publicly released only in fragmentary form, two years after the fact — and declares the military’s internal investigation an obvious cover-up. The only question is: of what?
Law Professor Mark Denbeaux, who directed the study, said in an interview that “there are two possibilities here. Either the investigation is a cover-up of gross dereliction of duty, or it is a cover-up of something far more chilling. More than three years later we do not know what really happened.” (Read a Q&A with Denbeaux: “‘The Most Innocent Explanation Is That This Is Gitmo Meets Lord Of The Flies’”.)
Elizabeth Edwards Speaks at Campbell Law School
One of the nation’s most out-spoken advocates for health care reform brought her message to Raleigh on Saturday.
Elizabeth Edwards says Americans are suffering because of a broken system, Edwards spoke at Campbell Law School, telling the crowd there that people who are sick should be able to get treatment.
She also went on to blame insurance companies who have high administrative costs and exclude pre-existing conditions.
She says that her battle with cancer now puts her in the pre-existing condition category but that she is doing better than expected.
“I am. I’m doing very well, just went to the doctor this week and things, ah, look good. So all those doomsayers from two and half years ago, I hope that they’re going to have to erase some of the words that they wrote,“ Edwards said.
Edwards says she is confident that lawmakers will pass some sort of health care reform.
She just wants it to give good coverage to everyone.
[WNCT]
Ralph Nader Calls Out Law Schools
A University of Connecticut School of Law moot courtroom was a fitting setting last month, as consumer activist, politician and lawyer Ralph Nader sought to put the legal profession on trial.
Warrantless eavesdropping, the war in Iraq, corporate wrongdoing — Nader is a man with quite a few bones to pick. But his chief complaint was that America’s lawyers have done too little to stand in the way of government policies he labeled unconstitutional. He noted the strong reaction of Pakistan’s lawyers last year when that country’s leader threatened the integrity of its justice system.
“Did you see our beloved profession up in arms here?” Nader asked. “Lawyers in Pakistan were marching. Where were our lawyers?”
The UConn law school chapters of the ACLU and the National Lawyers Guild brought Nader, a Winsted native, to Hartford. The event drew roughly 100 law students, as Nader urged future jurists to observe a duty beyond zealous representation of their clients. “A lawyer’s role is to look out for the administration of justice,” he said.
Nader placed much of the blame on America’s system of legal education, which he said has spent too much time teaching substantive law and too little encouraging students to think critically about why the law is what it is.
Nader attended law school in the 1950s at Harvard — an institution with which one law student in attendance said Nader seems to have “a love-hate relationship.”
“We were told we were being taught by the best and brightest law professors the world could produce,” Nader said. “And if you doubted [they were the best and brightest], you could just ask them.”
But Nader said his legal education failed to address deeper issues behind substantive law. His Corporations Law professor assigned case upon case from Delaware, Nader recalled, without explaining so many companies incorporate in that state because of its corporate-friendly laws. Law students must be made aware of corporate influences on the legal system, he said.
[Law.com]
Brooklyn Law School Reputation Increasing? They think so.
Brooklyn Law School, which has over a hundred years of proud history as a local institution in Downtown Brooklyn, is enjoying new prestige in recent years among American law schools. To Dean Joan Gottesman Wexler, it’s long overdue.
“We think that our reputation is beginning to catch up with reality, which is that we have fabulous students and a faculty that’s as good as any in the country,” Dean Wexler said during a recent interview.
However, Brooklyn Law School (BLS) has a somewhat precarious position in the world of law schools. Its alumni have a reputation around the city of being highly capable attorneys, and many members of the Brooklyn judiciary studied there. But it’s not always the first choice for undergraduate students at the nation’s top colleges.
“Sometimes it’s difficult for us because people look at our name and think what is this, it’s a local school,” Wexler acknowledged. “We don’t have a basketball team. Schools that do well in basketball — their ranking goes up.”
Dean Wexler was of course referring to the well-known U.S. News & World Reports rankings of the best law schools in the country. BLS had risen in recent years to 58, but was most recently ranked at 61 out of the 200 law schools accredited by the American Bar Association that are listed. It’s never cracked the first-tier top 50.
One third-year student who had recently chosen to study at Tulane Law School over Brooklyn Law spoke to the Eagle about the process:
Harvard and Georgetown Law Schools Make Grading Easier
Given the state of the legal economy, I don’t have a problem with grade inflation at top law schools. The job market is terrible enough as it is. If an extra (inflated and totally BS) third of a grade helps a student get a job right now, I think that is fine. Whatever, sometimes you have to “juke the stats,” and I understand that.
But it’s not cool when schools institute grade inflation secretly and hope nobody will notice. It’s not cool when schools try to pass off grade inflation as something other than grade inflation. Law schools have to do what they have to do, but there is no reason to pretend that everybody is stupid.
At Harvard Law School and at Georgetown University Law Center, the administrations have decided that their students need things to be a little easier. But neither law school seems willing to admit that the economy played a role in their sudden embrace of grade reform.


