Northwestern University School of Law

Northwestern University School of Law
Northwestern University School of Law
Northwestern University Seal.svg
Motto Quaecumque sunt vera (Latin)

Ὁ Λόγος πλήρης χάριτος καὶ ἀληθείας- Ho logos pleres charitos kai aletheias (Greek)
Whatsoever things are true (Philippians 4:8 AV)
The word full of grace and truth (Gospel of John 1:14)

Established 1859
School type Private
Parent endowment US $6.3 billion
Dean Kimberly A. Yuracko, Interim Dean
Location Chicago, Illinois, USA
41°53′47″N 87°37′03″W / 41.8963°N 87.6174°W / 41.8963; -87.6174Coordinates: 41°53′47″N 87°37′03″W / 41.8963°N 87.6174°W / 41.8963; -87.6174
Enrollment 781[1]
Faculty 185[1]
USNWR ranking 12[1]
Bar pass rate 95.96%[1]
Annual tuition $47,472[1]
Website law.northwestern.edu
ABA profile Northwestern Law Profile
Northwestern Law

The Northwestern University School of Law is a private American law school in Chicago, Illinois. The law school was founded in 1859 as the Union College of Law of the Old University of Chicago.[2] The first law school established in Chicago, it became jointly controlled by Northwestern University in 1873 and fully incorporated into the University in 1891. Located in the near north side's Streeterville, it is one of the eleven academic institutions of Northwestern University. The law school enjoys a strong national reputation. It is currently ranked 12th by the 2011 Edition of US News and World Report guide to the nation's top law schools.[3]

Campus

Entrance to Levy-Meyer Hall

Northwestern Law is located on Northwestern University's downtown campus in Chicago's Streeterville/Gold Coast neighborhood. The law school is on Lake Shore Drive and Chicago Avenue, adjacent to Lake Shore Park and Lake Michigan. It is a few blocks from the John Hancock Center, Magnificent Mile, Water Tower, Oak Street Beach and Navy Pier.

Rankings and honors

The 2011 edition of U.S. News & World Report Best Grad Schools[3] ranked Northwestern Law:
  • 11th in the country Overall
  • 7th for Trial Advocacy
  • 4th for Tax Law
  • 11th for Legal Writing
Leiter’s Law School Rankings placed the law school:
  • 5th in Percentage of Federal Appellate Clerkships for 2008–2009
  • 6th in Success Rate of Graduates on the Teaching Market 2006-2008
  • 9th in Student Quality
  • 10th in Total Supreme Court Clerks for 2000-2007 terms
  • 11th for Largest Gross Endowment[4]
The Princeton Review most recently[5] placed the law school:
  • 1st for Best Career Prospects
  • 7th for Toughest to Get Into
  • 9th for Best Quality of Life
  • 10th for Best Overall Academic Experience
Judging the Law Schools (2009)[6] ranked the law school:
  • 7th in the country Overall
Vault Law School Guide rankings placed the law school:
  • 9th in the country overall
The 2010 National Law Journal ranked Northwestern Law:
  • 1st for Percentage of Graduates Hired by NLJ250 Firms

Admissions

Admission to Northwestern Law is extremely competitive; the median LSAT is in the top 2% of all test takers nationwide, ranking it #6 among all law schools. The Fall 2011 entering class had a median GPA of 3.8 and a median LSAT of 170.[7]

The Law School's admissions philosophy also places unusual emphasis on matriculating students demonstrating maturity and interpersonal skills, attributes the School believes are conducive to career success. To this end, every applicant is invited to interview, either with a member of the admissions staff or a local alum. The interviewing program focuses on such personal qualities as speaking and writing skills, judgment, and ambition.

The School’s practical philosophy is manifested in a strong preference for applicants with at least two years of work experience. Approximately 95% of the school's students enter with at least one year of full-time work experience; 80% possess more than two years of experience.[8] In this respect, Northwestern Law is similar to many business schools.

Faculty

The Northwestern Law faculty is well regarded for academic strength in a number of disciplines including tax, international law, trial advocacy, alternative dispute resolution, legal writing, and others. The 2010 student/faculty ratio was 8.8 to 1.[1]

Selected prominent Northwestern Law faculty, past and present, include:

  • David E. Van Zandt, former dean of Northwestern University School of Law
  • Robert Bennett, constitutional scholar, contract law scholar, and founder of the Chicago Council for Lawyers.
  • Steven Calabresi, constitutional scholar and Founder and Chairman of the Federalist Society
  • Anthony D'Amato, international legal scholar, European Court of Human Rights litigator
  • Bernardine Dohrn, clinical professor, leader of the 1960s-70s radical leftist organization Weatherman
  • Andrew Koppelman, noted legal scholar on same-sex marriage
  • Leon Green, former dean; renowned for pioneering work in the law of torts, especially causation and injuries to relations
  • Steven Lubet, nationally recognized trial advocacy expert and director of the Fred Bartlit Center for Trial Strategy
  • Charles T. McCormick, expert on evidence, damages, and federal court procedure; writings include the classic hornbooks, Handbook on the Law of Damages (1935) and Handbook on the Law of Evidence (1954).
  • John O. McGinnis, renowned expert on trade law and one of nation's leading scholars in the field of Constitutional Law.
  • Dawn Clark Netsch, prominent member of the Democratic Party and the first woman to be nominated by a major political party to run for Governor of Illinois.
  • Roscoe Pound, former dean of Harvard Law School, founder of the movement for "sociological jurisprudence"
  • Stephen Presser, professor of legal history and jurisprudence
  • Martin Redish, nationally renowned authority on the subjects of federal jurisdiction, civil procedure, and the First Amendment
  • David S. Ruder, former Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission
  • David Scheffer, international law and war crimes expert who served as the first United States Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues
  • Marshall Shapo, expert on tort law and author of The Law of Products Liability
  • James B. Speta, expert in telecommunications and Internet policy
  • Charles Taylor, internationally renowned political philosopher, Royal Society of Canada fellow, British Academy fellow, member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences
  • John Henry Wigmore, the "father of modern evidence" and author of Treatise on Evidence

Popular Media

  • The Chicago Code was substantially filmed on the Northwestern Law campus in Chicago.[9] This television drama premiered on Fox on February 7, 2011.[10] Filming at Northwestern Law began in August 2010.[9] Classrooms in the Law School are depicted as interior offices for the fictional offices for City administration. Levy Mayer 212 served as the main taping location at the Law School.[9]

Degree programs

Northwestern University School of Law offers several degree programs.

JD programs

The primary program is the juris doctor (JD), a degree comprising 86 semester hours of credit that full-time students may complete in three years. During the first year, students take a combination of required classes and electives. The second and third year offer more flexibility in planning the student's curriculum as there is only one mandatory class. Students can choose a general course of study or decide to concentrate in one of five areas. Students also have the opportunity to participate in the Bluhm Legal Clinic, serve on one of the law school’s scholarly journals, audition for one of the law school's trial or moot court teams, or study abroad through the International Team Project program.

To be considered for the JD program, students must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university or expect to finish one by the end of the academic year in which they apply.

Accelerated JD

Northwestern Law offers a two-year accelerated JD program.

Joint-Degree programs

Northwestern Law offers a number of joint-degree programs:

JD-MBA

The JD-MBA Program is a dual-degree program administered by both the law school and the Kellogg School of Management. The Northwestern JD-MBA program is completed in 3 years, as opposed to the four years required at most other institutions. Students graduate with both a Juris Doctor (JD) degree and a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree. The program has a unique application process among JD-MBA programs, in that there is a single admissions application and the GMAT is required, but not the LSAT. The JD-MBA program enrolls, on average, 25 students per year.

LLM programs

The nine-month general LLM program enrolls graduates of foreign law schools, giving them an opportunity to expand their knowledge of American law and legal processes, continue their studies in international law, and engage in comparative legal research. Graduates of the program represent more than 50 countries and hold positions in many areas of practice.

Executive LLM

Northwestern Law continues to expand its international reach by offering Executive LLM Programs for working legal and business professionals in Europe, Korea, and the Middle East. The programs, designed specifically for professionals who can not or do not wish to undertake a full-time Master of Laws (LLM) degree in the United States or elsewhere, are made possible through partnerships with the KAIST Business School in Seoul, South Korea, the IE Business School in Madrid, Spain, Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Tax LLM

The tax program provides a foundation in the principal areas of tax law and complex tax transactions. Individuals who already hold a JD degree can enroll on either a full-time or part-time basis to receive the LLM degree. Practicing attorneys may also take courses on a non-degree basis to refine their knowledge in specialized areas of the tax law. Current law students can participate in the joint JD-LLM program and receive a JD and LLM in seven semesters.

Journals

The law school sponsors six student-run scholarly legal journals. Student staff members are selected based on a writing competition, editing competition, and first-year grades, or a publishable note or comment on a legal topic.[11]

Northwestern University Law Review

The Northwestern University Law Review was first published in 1906 when it was called the "Illinois Law Review." Prior editors include: Roscoe Pound, long-time dean of Harvard Law School; Judge Robert A. Sprecher of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit; US Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens; Dean James A. Rahl; Illinois Governor Daniel Walker; and former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission Newton N. Minow; US Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg and Presidential Candidate Adlai Stevenson. The Northwestern University Law Review is among the eight most frequently cited law reviews in the country.

Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property

The Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property addresses subjects relating to law at the intersection of technology and intellectual property, including law and biotechnology, copyrights, the Internet, media, patents, telecommunications, and trademarks. The format of this online Journal permits these rapidly developing issues to be addressed in a timely manner by combining scholarly analyses with an examination of the current news in intellectual property law. The Journal is among the top ranked intellectual property and technology law reviews in the United States.

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology is one of the most widely read and widely cited publications in the world.[12] It is the second most widely subscribed journal published by any law school in the country.[12] It is one of the most widely circulated law journals in the country.[12] The journal was founded in 1910 by Dean John Henry Wigmore.[13] It was a product of the "National Conference on Criminal Law and Criminology" held in 1909 to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Northwestern University School of Law. The Conference elected Dean Wigmore as its first president and resulted in the creation of the Journal. Its stated purpose was to articulate and promote a criminal justice reform agenda, associated with the Progressive Era that dominated the first third of the twentieth century.[citation needed]

Journal of Law and Social Policy

The Journal of Law and Social Policy is an interdisciplinary journal that explores the impact of the law on different aspects of society. Topics covered include race, gender, sexual orientation, housing, immigration, health care, juvenile justice, voting rights, family law, civil rights, poverty, the environment, and privacy rights.[14]

Journal of International Law and Business

The Journal of International Law and Business has a substantive focus on private international law, as opposed to public international law or human rights. It seeks scholarship analyzing transnational and international legal problems and their effect on private entities. The Journal's stated goal is to promote an understanding of the future course of international legal developments as they relate to private entities.[15]

Journal of International Human Rights

The Journal of International Human Rights (JIHR) is an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to providing a dynamic forum for the discussion of human rights issues and international human rights law.[16] The Journal seeks contributions from professionals, scholars, and experienced field workers of every background, including but not limited to law, business, political science, public policy, economics, sociology, religion, and international relations. In addition to publication, the Journal seeks to promote the discussion of international human rights law by organizing semi-annual Symposia and a Speaker Series.


Pritzker Legal Research Center

The Pritzker Legal Research Center fulfills the research and information needs of the faculty and students of Northwestern Law. The Center is named after the Pritzker family, the Chicago family that is known for its international philanthropy. Jay A. Pritzker (1922-1999) graduated from Northwestern University in 1941 and Northwestern University School of Law in 1947.

Bluhm Legal Clinic

Clinical education at Northwestern began in 1910 when Dean John Henry Wigmore developed a program with the Chicago Legal Aid Society that evolved into the Bluhm Legal Clinic. The clinic opened its doors in 1969 with two staff attorneys and 12 students. Today, more than 20 clinical professors mentor over 120 students who take clinical courses each year. Each center within the Clinic operates as a quasi-law firm, wherein students assist clients with practical legal matters under the tutelage of full-time faculty from the School.

Center on Wrongful Convictions

The Center on Wrongful Convictions[17] is dedicated to identifying and rectifying wrongful convictions and other serious miscarriages of justice. Its work was influential in former Illinois Governor George H. Ryan's decision to commute the death sentences of all Illinois' death row prisoners in 2003. Governor Ryan announced the decision on January 11, 2003 at an event held at the law school.

The Center includes faculty, staff, cooperating outside attorneys, and Bluhm Legal Clinic students investigate possible wrongful convictions and represent imprisoned clients with claims of actual innocence. The Center also focuses on identifying systemic problems in the criminal justice system and, together with the community services component, on developing initiatives designed to raise public awareness of the prevalence, causes, and social costs of wrongful convictions and promote reform of the criminal justice system. In addition, the community services component helps exonerated former prisoners cope with the difficult process of reintegration into free society. The executive director is Rob Warden.

The Supreme Court Clinic

Northwestern was one of the first law schools in the country to offer a Supreme Court Clinic, allowing second- and third-year students the opportunity to work on cases pending before the Supreme Court of the United States. Supervised by attorneys from Sidley Austin's elite appellate litigation practice who routinely argue before the Supreme Court, clinic students perform research and draft briefs for cases that will define federal law and appear in law school casebooks for years to come. The clinic is run by distinguished Northwestern alumnus and preeminent Supreme Court litigator Carter Phillips, from Sidley Austin's Washington, D.C. office.

Federal Appellate Clinic

The Federal Appellate Clinic allows third-year students to obtain provisional law licenses and argue cases before the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Like the Supreme Court Clinic, the Federal Appellate Clinic provides the rare opportunity for students to help shape federal law, but in even more direct fashion. Students in this clinic spend an entire year representing a criminal appellant, from merits briefing to oral argument. The Federal Appellate Clinic is run by Northwestern Clinical Professor and former Seventh Circuit law clerk Sarah Schrup. In 2008, two clinic students arguing against the United States Attorney's Office successfully persuaded the Seventh Circuit to overturn the conviction of a defendant wrongly charged under a statute that did not fit his actual crime.

Children and Family Justice Center

Founded in 1992, the Children and Family Justice Center has developed into one of the most effective and diverse clinical programs of its kind. Attorneys, a social worker, and affiliated professionals help second- and third-year law students meet with clients, research legal issues, and learn pretrial investigation, interviewing, and counseling skills and litigate cases. The Center represents young people on matters of delinquency and crime, family violence, school discipline, health and disability, and immigration and asylum.

As a comprehensive children's law center and clinical legal education resource, the Center is also committed to legal research and scholarship on laws and legal institutions that deal with children all over the world. Through lectures, newspaper and magazine articles by staff attorneys, courses on Children and Human Rights, work as visiting faculty in other countries, published articles and regular speakers and symposia, the CFJC has addressed issues such as the condition of children in Afghanistan, the condition of children in armed conflict, inter-country adoption, corporal punishment, the right to education and health care, and conditions of confinement.

MacArthur Justice Center

The MacArthur Justice Center, led by Profs. Locke E. Bowman and Joseph Margulies, does work on police misconduct, wrongful detention compensation, post-9/11 work, and other public interest and civil rights issues. Of particular note is the Guantanamo Bay detainee representation led by Joseph Margulies, author of Guantanamo and the Abuse of Presidential Power and lead counsel in Rasul v. Bush.

Small Business Opportunity Center

The Law School's Small Business Opportunity Center (SBOC) is the first transactional clinic at any major law school. Since its founding in 1998, more than 1,000 potential clients have come to the SBOC for legal assistance and over 300 have been served. These include technology executives, consultants, inventors, manufacturers and sellers of consumer products, musical groups, and persons interested in establishing nonprofit organizations.

The Center is also heavily involved in teaching in the field of entrepreneurship law, and hosts symposia and conferences to facilitate that endeavor. In particular, in 2006 the SBOC hosted the first ever entrepreneurship conference at any law school in the country.

Center for International Human Rights

The Center for International Human Rights works to advance human rights while enabling students to test and refine their academic learning in real cases. Stressing a comprehensive interdisciplinary approach, the center provides policy perspectives to the United Nations, the Organization of American States, the U.S. Department of State, foreign governments, and nongovernmental organizations.

Faculty, staff, and students, as well as volunteer lawyers, visiting fellows, and interns carry out research, public and professional education, technical assistance, and advocacy of pressing international issues.

The center also offers students an opportunity to earn an LLM in Human Rights. The degree program is designed for students from transitional democracies and for those with career interests in international human rights law.

Over the years faculty and staff working in the center have addressed, among other matters, the role of the International Criminal Court, international terrorism, U.S. death penalty laws, truth commissions, economic rights, NATO's humanitarian intervention, and political asylum cases. Students have investigated cases and had summer internships in Guatemala, Indonesia, and at the U.N. Human Rights Centre in Geneva.

Each year the center organizes seminars, lectures, and conferences for lawyers and the public on topics ranging from reparations for Holocaust survivors to the human rights responsibilities of multinational corporations. The center plays a vital role in the Law School's expanding international program, which previously had concentrated on private international law.

Investor Protection Center

Northwestern Law's Investor Protection Center is one of fewer than 10 such centers in the country and the first among law schools in the Midwest. The Investor Protection Center provides assistance to investors with limited income or small dollar claims who are unable to obtain legal representation. Law students, under the supervision of faculty attorneys, represent customers in handling their disputes with broker-dealers.

During the last few years, the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) and other organizations have taken steps to make more information and services available to investors. Northwestern Law's Investor Protection Center operates with the aid of grants from the NASD Investor Education Foundation and other organizations to focus on priority areas. In particular, the center is focused on helping to meet the needs of women, novice investors, and the elderly, in connection with securities arbitration.

Fred Bartlit Center for Trial Strategy

Named in honor of an innovative leader in litigation and business strategies, the Fred Bartlit Center for Trial Strategy was established in 1999 to conduct research and teach innovative and technologically advanced trial strategy. The Bartlit Center focuses on changes in trial craft brought on by new technologies and compensation approaches.

The Bartlit Center sponsors and conducts academic research on the litigation process; support teaching skills in the JD program; and holds national conferences to explore and teach innovative trial and trial management strategies. The Bartlit Center works to complement the Law School's program in simulation-based teaching of trial skills and builds on the research produced by Northwestern Law faculty.

Alumni

Selected prominent Northwestern Law alumni include:

Government / Politics

John Paul Stevens, Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, J.D. '47
Arthur Goldberg, Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, J.D. '30

Academia

Historic Seal of the Northwestern University School of Law. Designed by Dean John Henry Wigmore and adopted by the faculty in 1925.[20]
  • Gregory S. Alexander, Professor of Law, Cornell Law School
  • Raoul Berger, one of America 's foremost legal historians, former Senior Fellow in American Legal History at Harvard University and author of Government by Judiciary: The Transformation of the Fourteenth Amendment
  • G. Marcus Cole, Professor of Law, Helen L. Crocker Faculty Scholar, and Associate Dean for Curriculum, Stanford Law School
  • John E. Coons, Professor of Law, Emeritus, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall)
  • C. Thomas Dienes, Lyle T. Alverson Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School
  • Thomas F. Geraghty, Associate Dean for Clinical Education; Professor of Law; Director, Bluhm Legal Clinic, Northwestern University School of Law
  • Cheryl Harris, Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law
  • Clark C. Havighurst, William Neal Reynolds Emeritus Professor of Law, Duke University School of Law
  • Charles David Hricik, Author and Distinguished Professor of Law, Mercer University School of Law
  • Terrence Isamu ("Terry Ryan") Ryan, graduate of Cornell University and practitioner of brazilian jiu-jitsu under the tutelage of Carlson Gracie
  • Charles P. Kindregan, Jr., expert in assisted reproduction law, Professor at Suffolk University Law School
  • James A. Rahl, Owen L. Coon Professor of Law Emeritus, Northwestern University School of Law
  • Stephen D. Sugarman, Agnes Roddy Robb Professor of Law, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall)
  • Jonathan Turley, J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law, The George Washington University Law School

For-profit / Non-profit organizations

Firsts

  • Ada Kepley, first woman in the United States to graduate from a law school[21]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f American Bar Association Profile for Northwestern Law
  2. ^ "Celebrating 150 Years", Northwestern University School of Law, accessed November 1, 2010.
  3. ^ a b "Best Law Schools: Ranked in 2011", U.S.News & World Report, accessed March 20, 2011.
  4. ^ "Top 20 Law School Endowments", Leiter Law School, accessed September 25, 2006.
  5. ^ "The Best 172 Law Schools", The Princeton Review, 2011.
  6. ^ "10th Annual Judging the Law Schools is Released", Judging the Law Schools, 2009 edition, accessed May 2, 2009.
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ Northwestern Law Admissions, accessed December 5, 2008.
  9. ^ a b c "Lights, Camera, Action! New Police Drama Filmed at Northwestern Law", E-Briefs: November 2010, Northwestern University School of Law, accessed December 1, 2010.
  10. ^ Seidman, Robert (November 3, 2010). "‘The Chicago Code’ (FKA ‘Ride Along’) Premieres Night After Super Bowl XLV, Monday, February 7". TV by the Numbers. http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/11/03/the-chicago-code-fka-ride-along-premieres-night-after-super-bowl-xlv-monday-february-7/70722. Retrieved November 3, 2010. 
  11. ^ Northwestern Law Journals
  12. ^ a b c TLS Profile on Northwestern Law
  13. ^ The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Northwestern University
  14. ^ Journal of Law and Social Policy, Northwestern University
  15. ^ Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business
  16. ^ Journal of International Human Rights, Northwestern University
  17. ^ Center on Wrongful Convictions, Bluhm Legal Clinic
  18. ^ [2]
  19. ^ [3]
  20. ^ Northwestern University School of Law, A Description of the New Buildings, Levy Mayer Hall and Elbert H. Gary Law Library Building. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. 1926. p. 60. 
  21. ^ Charlton Thomas Lewis, Joseph H. Willsey. "Harper's book of facts: a classified history of the world; embracing science, literature, and art". Harper & Brothers, 1895, p. 939.

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