By Karen Sloan | July 30, 2015
The law school class of 2014 enjoyed slightly better success on the entry-level job market than its did predecessor, according to employment figures released on Thursday by NALP, the National Association for Law Placement.
By Andrew Keshner | July 29, 2015
Marshall Miller, principal deputy assistant attorney general and chief of staff of the Department of Justice's Criminal Division, is leaving to join New York University School of Law's corporate compliance program.
By Karen Sloan | July 29, 2015
Law schools don't prepare graduates for the financial realities they'll face when their student loans come due, an American Bar Association task force has concluded after a year spent examining legal education costs. Next week, the House of Delegates will take up a proposal to fix that.
By Mike Scarcella | July 29, 2015
The National Law Journal's series on judicial transparency last year—a spotlight on judges' financial disclosure forms—was awarded a bronze medal for features by the American Society of Business Publication Editors. The NLJ was among several ALM Media publications awarded Friday at a banquet in New York.
By Andrew Denney | July 28, 2015
The founder of civil litigation boutique Susman Godfrey has given $2 million to the New York University School of Law to study the decline of the civil jury trial in American jurisprudence.
By Andrew Denney | July 28, 2015
Following a general decline in law school admissions, the number of aspiring attorneys expected to take the New York's July bar examination on Tuesday and Wednesday is slightly smaller than in 2014.
By Karen Sloan | July 28, 2015
Boston University School of Law is bolstering its graduate public-interest fellowship program with a $2 million influx of funding.
By Karen Sloan | July 27, 2015
The University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law and the University of Baltimore School of Law are launching an incubator to help recent graduates launch solo practices while serving low-income clients.
By almstaff | July 27, 2015
Law profs compare and contrast "Mockingbird" Atticus and "Watchman" Atticus.
By Karen Sloan | July 27, 2015
Atticus Finch — unimpeachable lawyer and civil rights champion, or unapologetic racist? Readers have struggled to reconcile these two versions of fiction's most iconic attorney since the July 14 publication of Harper Lee's "Go Set A Watchman," set some 20 years after the events of "To Kill A Mockingbird."
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