Failing Law Schools

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Jun 18, 2012 - Education - 235 pages
"An essential title for anyone thinking of law school or concerned with America's dysfunctional legal system." — Library Journal
On the surface, law schools today are thriving. Enrollments are on the rise and law professors are among the highest paid. Yet behind the flourishing facade, law schools are failing abjectly. Recent front-page stories have detailed widespread dubious practices, including false reporting of LSAT and GPA scores, misleading placement reports, and the fundamental failure to prepare graduates to enter the profession.
Addressing all these problems and more is renowned legal scholar Brian Z. Tamanaha. Piece by piece, Tamanaha lays out the how and why of the crisis and the likely consequences if the current trend continues. The out-of-pocket cost of obtaining a law degree at many schools now approaches $200,000. The average law school graduate's debt is around $100,000—the highest it has ever been—while the legal job market is the worst in decades.
Growing concern with the crisis in legal education has led to high-profile coverage in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, and many observers expect it soon will be the focus of congressional scrutiny. Bringing to the table his years of experience from within the legal academy, Tamanaha provides the perfect resource for assessing what's wrong with law schools and figuring out how to fix them.
" Failing Law Schools presents a comprehensive case for the negative side of the legal education debate and I am sure that many legal academics and every law school dean will be talking about it." —Stanley Fish, Florida International University College of Law
 

Contents

A Law School in Crisis Circa 1997
1
Temptations of SelfRegulation
9
About Law Professors
37
The US News Ranking Effect
69
The Broken Economic Model
105
List of Abbreviations
189
List of Law Schools Referenced
191
Notes
195
Index
223
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About the author (2012)

Brian Z. Tamanaha is the William Gardiner Hammond Professor of Law at the Washington University School of Law and the author of six books, including A General Jurisprudence of Law and Society, Law as a Means to an End, and Beyond the Formalist-Realist Divide.

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