- Salmon P. Chase College of Law
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Salmon P. Chase College of Law
Northern Kentucky UniversityEstablished 1893 School type public Dean Dennis Honabach Location Highland Heights, Kentucky, USA Enrollment 614 (375 full-time, 239 part-time) numbers are approximate Faculty 39 full-time, 24 adjunct USNWR ranking Tier 4 Annual tuition $15,054 (resident), $24,778 (metro), $32,812 (non-resident) Website chaselaw.nku.edu Salmon P. Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky University is a law school in Highland Heights, Kentucky that was founded in 1893 and accredited by the American Bar Association in 1959. The college of law provides both part-time and full-time programs of study that lead to a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree as well as a joint JD/MBA degree. The school was named for the Reconstruction era U.S. Chief Justice, Salmon P. Chase.
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History and background
Salmon P. Chase College of Law ("Chase"), was founded in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1893 as an evening law school affiliated with the Cincinnati YMCA. In 1971, Chase merged into the Kentucky state university system by becoming a part of Northern Kentucky University.[1] The school then moved from downtown Cincinnati, across the Ohio River, to its present location at Northern Kentucky University.
Learning environment and library
The law school is located in Nunn Hall on the main campus of Northern Kentucky University in Highland Heights, Kentucky, part of the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky metropolitan area. Nunn Hall’s two mock courtrooms are equipped with video and computer technology, as are a majority of the lecture halls and classrooms.[2]
The Chase law library occupies two stories of the five-story Nunn Hall building. The law library's collection consists of approximately 332,151 volumes, along with providing access to electronic resources, including HeinOnline, LexisNexis, Westlaw, and many other Web-based products.[3]
Student organizations, competition teams, law review
Chase has a number of student organizations: Federalist Society(National Chapter), Student Bar Association, American Constitution Society for Law and Policy (National Chapter), Black Law Students Association, Chase Intellectual Property Society, Chase Latino Law Association, Chase Public Interest Group, Chase Student Advocacy Society, Environmental Law Society, International Law Student Association, Legal Association of Women, Phi Alpha Delta, Sports and Entertainment Law Association, Transactional Law Practice Group.
Chase students may obtain hands-on experience and test their skills against those of other law students both at Chase and throughout the country through a variety of competition team programs. Some recent competition highlights include the 2011 Moot Court Team national championship at the Labor and Employment Law Moot Court Competition, the 2010 National Trial Team championship at the Kentucky Mock Trial Competition, the 2011 National Trial Team regional championship at the National Trial Competition, and the 2011 Arbitration Team national runner-up at the ABA National Arbitration Competition. Other competition teams are Client Counseling Team, Negotiation Team, and the newly formed Toastmasters chapter.
Chase also publishes the Northern Kentucky Law Review four times a year. The journal is independently edited and published by Chase students. The law review also hosts a fall and spring symposium each year.
Clinic and Externship Opportunities
Chase provides students with many opportunities to complete clinics and/or externships before graduation.
Externship opportunities include working with Kentucky Attorney General's Office, City Solicitors' offices, Internal Revenue Service, Legal Aid, National Labor Relations Board, Ohio Justice and Policy Center, and prosecutors' offices, among others.
Clinic opportunities include the Children's Law Center Clinic, Constitutional Litigation Clinic, Indigent Defense Clinic, Kentucky Criminal Justice Clinic, Kentucky Innocence Project, and Local Government Law Clinic.
Chase also opened the Small Business & Nonprofit Law Clinic in the fall of 2010. It was the first clinic of its kind in Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati. The law clinic provides students with unique, practical experience in transactional law, while providing affordable legal services to entrepreneurs, small businesses, and nonprofit entities in the Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati community. Chase law students staff the clinic under the supervision of a full-time clinic director and licensed attorney. Students interact directly with clients to provide legal advice on a wide range of business-law issues including entity formation, intellectual property, and contracts.
References
- ^ Pickering, Jim (Spring 2003). "College of Law turns 110: History of Chase" (PDF). http://chaselaw.nku.edu/documents/chase_magazine/Chase_Mag_Spr_03.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-26.
- ^ Law School Admission Council (LSAC) (2008). "ABA-LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools, Chase College of Law Description". LSAC. pp. 528–29. http://officialguide.lsac.org/SearchResults/SchoolPage_PDFs/LSAC_LawSchoolDescription/LSAC1709.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-26.[dead link]
- ^ Law School Admission Council (LSAC) (2008). "ABA-LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools, Official ABA Data: Chase College of Law". LSAC. pp. 526–27. http://officialguide.lsac.org/SearchResults/SchoolPage_PDFs/ABA_LawSchoolData/ABA1709.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-04.[dead link]
Categories:- Northern Kentucky University
- Law schools in Kentucky
- Educational institutions established in 1893
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