- Gerald P. Lopez
Gerald P. López is Professor of Law at
UCLA School of Law and one of the most influential Latino/Chicano Professor in the nation. He obtained his B.A. from the University of Southern California in 1970 and his J.D. fromHarvard Law School in 1974. He has taught at UCLA School of Law,Stanford Law School andNew York University School of Law . At UCLA he teaches: Transforming Legal Education?, a Problem Solving Workshop, a Clinical in Community Outreach, Education and Organizing, as well as a Seminar in Legal Education.He has been the nation’s leading theorist about lawyering as problem-solving. He created the “rebellious vision” of progressive practice. He has been among the country’s leading on-the-ground practitioners of and advocates for comprehensive and coordinated legal and non-legal problem solving in low-income, of color, and immigrant communities. At Stanford he co-founded the Lawyering for Social Change Program and at UCLA the Program in Public Interest Law and Policy. He is the author of many books and articles but is most known for his book on "Rebellious Lawyering," which is the most influential book ever written about progressive law practice and community problem solving. His work centers on: economic initiatives, prisoner programs, reentry programs, policy reforms, civil rights litigation, outreach and education and organizing campaigns, and major empirical research studies. He scholarship focuses on problem-solving practices, race and culture, economic development, reentry, health care, immigration, legal education, and emerging social, economic, and political issues.
http://www.law.ucla.edu/home/index.asp?page=2205
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