By Christine Charnosky | April 12, 2024
The latest in law dean and other legal education news from across the U.S.
By Christine Charnosky | April 10, 2024
"While our support for Free Speech is unwavering, we cannot condone using a social occasion at a person's private residence as a platform for protest," UC Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ wrote in a statement.
By Maria Dinzeo | April 10, 2024
"Just to be a mediocre lawyer in general, you have to understand AI," Glatstein told Berkeley Law's Irene Liu during an online event Tuesday. For those with higher aspirations, he said, "there's really no substitute for just digging in and doing the work."
By Marianna Wharry | March 28, 2024
Tolson received her juris doctor from the University of Chicago Law School in 2005, where she was a member of the University of Chicago Law Review and won the Thomas Mulroy Prize for Oral Advocacy in the Hinton Moot Court Competition.
By Christine Charnosky | March 20, 2024
"His integrity, wealth of experience at Stanford and collaborative style of leadership will greatly benefit the students, faculty and staff of the law school, as well as Stanford's senior leadership team," said Stanford provost and former law dean Jenny Martinez.
By Christine Charnosky | March 7, 2024
Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar of the ABA posted notice on Wednesday saying that after careful review of the Law School's revised teach-out plan submitted on Feb. 9, the Law School's accreditation will continue until July 1, 2027, which could be removed earlier.
By Chris O'Malley | February 27, 2024
Mark Brazeal closed 2023 on a high note, with the company finally closing on its $61 billion acquisition of VMware, the largest deal of the year.
By Christine Charnosky | February 26, 2024
NCBE formed the Family Law Content Scope panel, which will develop the content outline specifying the breadth and depth of family law material that will be tested on the NextGen bar exam beginning in July 2028.
By Christine Charnosky | February 16, 2024
Plaintiffs allege that the university, along with university President David Fike, have "engaged in fraudulent behavior, which constitutes unlawful business practices. These actions have also resulted in breaches of fiduciary duty, breach of express and implied contract, as well as claims for promissory estoppel, false advertising, promissory fraud, and constructive fraud."
By Colleen Murphy | February 2, 2024
"The urgent vision of this historic settlement is not just to recoup the academic losses suffered by California's most disadvantaged students, but to erase the opportunity gaps altogether exacerbated by the pandemic," Mark Rosenbaum, director with Public Counsel, a public-interest law firm in Los Angeles, said in a statement.
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