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Public law school in Los Angeles, California From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The University of California, Los Angeles School of Law (commonly known as UCLA School of Law or UCLA Law) is the law school of the University of California, Los Angeles.
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law | |
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Parent school | University of California, Los Angeles |
Established | 1949 |
School type | Public law school |
Parent endowment | $7.7 billion (2022–2023)[1] |
Dean | Michael Waterstone[2] |
Location | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Enrollment | 1,086 (as of May 18, 2022)[3] |
Faculty | 104 |
USNWR ranking | 13th (2024)[4] |
Bar pass rate | 92.47% (July 2022 1st time takers)[5] |
Website | law |
ABA profile | Standard 509 Report |
Founded in 1949, the UCLA School of Law is the third oldest of the five law schools within the University of California system.
In the 1930s, initial efforts to establish a law school at UCLA went nowhere as a result of resistance from UC president Robert Gordon Sproul, and because UCLA's supporters eventually refocused their efforts on first adding medical and engineering schools.[6]
During the mid-1940s, the impetus for the creation of the UCLA School of Law emerged from outside of the UCLA community. Assemblyman William Rosenthal of Boyle Heights (on the other side of Los Angeles from UCLA) conceived of and fought for the creation of the first public law school in Southern California as a convenient and affordable alternative to the expensive private law school at USC.[6][7][8] Rosenthal's first attempt in 1945 failed, but his second attempt was able to gain momentum when the State Bar of California and the UCLA Alumni Association announced their support for the bill.[9] On July 18, 1947, Governor Earl Warren authorized the appropriation of $1 million for the construction of a new law school at UCLA by signing Assembly Bill 1361 into state law.[7][9][8]
The search for the law school's first dean was difficult and delayed its opening by a year.[9] UCLA's law school planning committee prioritized merit, while the then-conservative Regents of the University of California prioritized political beliefs.[7] Another factor was a simultaneous deanship vacancy at Berkeley Law.[9] Near the end of 1948, the Committee finally identified a sufficiently conservative candidate willing to take the job: L. Dale Coffman, then the dean of Vanderbilt University Law School.[7] The Regents believed Coffman would help bring balance to the UCLA campus, which they saw as overrun by Communists.[7]
Coffman was able to recruit several distinguished faculty to UCLA, including Roscoe Pound, Brainerd Currie, Rollin M. Perkins, and Harold Verrall.[7][9] To build a law library, he hired Thomas S. Dabagh, then the law librarian of the Los Angeles County Law Library.[7][9] The UCLA School of Law officially opened in September 1949 in temporary quarters in former military barracks behind Royce Hall, and moved into a permanent home upon the completion of the original Law Building in 1951.[7][9][8]
The new law school at Los Angeles was a pioneer in several ways: it was the first UC law school to be formally named a "school of law", the first to obtain a full subsidy from the Board of Regents for its law review, and the first to obtain partial autonomy for its faculty from the Academic Senate.[10]: 202–218 These developments had a considerable impact on Berkeley Law, which then changed its name, finally got its own subsidy for its law review, and battled with the other faculty at the Berkeley campus to avoid ejection of its faculty from the Academic Senate (because the amendments to the regents' standing orders affected faculty at all UC professional schools offering courses only at the graduate level).[10]: 202–218
Coffman's deanship did not end well, due to his vindictive and strongly prejudiced personality.[7][9][8] One sign of early trouble was when he drove out Dabagh in 1952 after they could not bridge their fundamental differences over how to run the law library, which was widely regarded around the UCLA community as contributing to Dabagh's early death in 1959.[7] On September 21, 1955, the faculty revolted in the form of a memorandum to chancellor Raymond B. Allen alleging that Coffman was categorically refusing to hire Jews or anyone he perceived to be leftist, and that the school's reputation was deteriorating because Coffman's abrasive personality had led to excessive faculty turnover.[7][8] On May 24, 1956, Coffman was stripped of his deanship after a lengthy investigation by a panel of deans of his biases and his "dictatorial, undemocratic, and autocratic" management style.[7] He remained on the faculty until his forced retirement in 1973, but continued to face allegations as late as 1971 that he was "an unreconstructed McCarthyite and pro-segregationist."[8]
Coffman's successor was Richard C. Maxwell, who served as the second dean of UCLA Law from 1958 to 1969.[11] Dean Maxwell "presided over happier, more harmonious years of institutional growth,"[8] and it was under his deanship that UCLA became "the youngest top-ranked law school in the country."[11] Dabagh's successor, Louis Piacenza, was able to grow the law school's library collection to 143,000 volumes by May 1963, which at that time was the 14th largest law school library in the United States.[8]
By 1963, the law school had 600 students in a building designed for 550, and the law building's deficiencies had become all too evident, such as a complete lack of air conditioning.[8] In October 1963, the law school administration announced a major remodeling and expansion project, which added air conditioning and a new wing to the building. During the 1960s, the law school grew so quickly that the new wing was already insufficient upon its completion in January 1967.[8] From its founding to the end of the 20th century, UCLA Law struggled with severe overcrowding, as librarians, faculty, staff, and as many as 18 student organizations—at one point, more than any other law school in the United States—competed for limited space in the law building for books, classes, conferences, and offices.[8]
The chronic space shortage was ultimately relieved by the addition of a wing for clinical education [12] and, after four grueling years of construction, completion of the new Hugh and Hazel Darling Law Library on January 22, 2000.[8]
Under Maxwell, the faculty size tripled, from 12 to 37 professors, and the school hired its first female and African-American faculty members. Under Murray Schwartz, who led the school from 1969 to 1975, and William Warren, who served as dean from 1975 to 1982, the school became a pioneer in clinical legal education,[13] developing a skills-based approach that remains among the school's hallmarks.
Students, too, broke new ground. In 1973, they created a network of student-run legal clinics first known as El Centro Legal de Santa Monica, which continues to provide pro bono services around Los Angeles with 15 separate clinics.[14]
In the 1990s and through subsequent years, the school established several "centers of excellence" that focus on education and advocacy in specific fields.
UCLA Law has approximately 1,000 students in its Juris Doctor (J.D.) program and 200 students in its Master of Laws (LL.M.) program, which is popular among foreign students intending to take the California bar exam. It also offers a Doctor of Juridical Science (S.J.D.) program for students who already have a J.D. and hope to become law professors, as well as a Master of Legal Studies (M.L.S.)[15] program for those who do not seek a law degree, but find a legal education an important complement to their professional obligations.
The school was a pioneer in clinical legal education and today offers a strong experiential education program. Through clinical courses and related offerings, the school allows students to directly represent clients in a variety of settings while under expert supervision. UCLA Law's clinics also provide service to many people who cannot afford to pay for their legal services, including veterans, the homeless, and indigent individuals appearing in criminal and immigration courts. In 2017, the school opened the Documentary Film Legal Clinic and Music Industry Clinic, which provide legal services to aspiring visual journalists, musicians, and entrepreneurs in the arts, and the Veterans Justice Clinic at the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center.
Students can elect to specialize in business law and policy, entertainment law, environmental law, public interest law, critical race studies, and law and philosophy. The roughly 300 students who begin law school at UCLA every year are divided into sections to encourage a sense of community. Students take all of their first-year courses with their sections.[16]
Several joint degree programs are available, which require four years of study and result in the simultaneous award of a Juris Doctor and master's degree in Afro-American studies, American Indian studies, law and management; public health; public policy; philosophy, social welfare, and urban planning.[17]
UCLA School of Law has a faculty of over 100 members with expertise in all major disciplines of law, representing "one of the most diverse in the country."[18] Thirteen members of the school's tenured faculty have been recognized for being the most-cited scholars in their areas of specialty.[19] The school faculty is ranked 11th[20] for scholarship, up from 15th in 2010 and 13th in 2013.
In 2023, 6,457 students applied to attend UCLA Law, and 315 were enrolled.[21] The median LSAT score for members of the entering class in 2023 is 170. The median GPA for members of the entering class in 2023 is 3.92.
J.D. Entering Class of 2026 Profile[22] |
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UCLA School of Law is located on the UCLA campus in the Westwood area of Los Angeles.[23]
The school proper is housed in a three-story brick building, with the library tower extending to four stories. A few offices, including the office of career services, the office of admissions, office of graduate studies and professional programs, and the office of graduate studies and international programs, are housed in an adjacent building, Dodd Hall.
In 2024, U.S. News & World Report ranked UCLA as 13th among U.S. law schools, including 4th in trial advocacy, 5th in environmental law, 6th in tax law, and 7th in criminal law.[4]
According to Brian Leiter's law school reports, UCLA Law ranked 12th in the nation for faculties in terms of scholarly distinction in 2022.[24]
The Hollywood Reporter has repeatedly ranked UCLA as the number one school for entertainment law.[25][26]
In 2022, UCLA joined a growing list of law schools that said they would no longer actively participate in the U.S. News Rankings.[27]
In October 2020, UCLA Law's bar passage rates were 97% in California and 100% in New York.[28]
American Bar Association data shows that more than 95%[29] of 2019 graduates had secured full-time, long-term, JD-required employment within 10 months of graduation.
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