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University of Chicago Law School

The University of Chicago Law School is the law school of the University of Chicago, a private research university in Chicago, Illinois. It is consistently ranked among the best and most prestigious law schools in the world, and has many distinguished alumni in the judiciary, academia, government, politics and business. It employs more than 180 full-time and part-time faculty and hosts more than 600 students in its Juris Doctor program, while also offering the Master of Laws, Master of Studies in Law and Doctor of Juridical Science degrees in law.[2] The law school has the highest percentage of recent graduates clerking for federal judges.[5]

The University of Chicago Law School
Parent schoolUniversity of Chicago
Established1902; 121 years ago (1902)
School typePrivate law school
Parent endowment$11.6 billion[1]
DeanThomas J. Miles
LocationChicago, Illinois, U.S.
Enrollment626 (2021)[2]
Faculty183 (2021)[2]
USNWR ranking3rd (2023)[3]
Bar pass rate97.9% (2020) [4]
Websitewww.law.uchicago.edu
ABA profileStandard 509 Report (2021)

The law school was conceived in the 1890s by the president of the University of Chicago, William Rainey Harper. Harper and the law school's first Dean, Joseph Henry Beale, designed the school's curriculum with inspiration from Ernst Freund's interdisciplinary approach to legal education.[6] The construction of the school was financed by John D. Rockefeller and the cornerstone was laid by President Theodore Roosevelt. The law school opened for classes in 1902. Since its inception, the law school's professors have taught students using the Socratic Method, which remains the law school's predominant mode of teaching in lectures and seminars.[7]

In the 1930s, the interdisciplinary nature of the law school's curriculum was further shaped by the law and economics movement. Economists Aaron Director and Henry Calvert Simons taught courses integrated with the antitrust curriculum taught by statesman Edward H. Levi, leading to the development of the Chicago school of economics and the Chicago School approach to antitrust law.[8] The law school expanded rapidly in the 1950s under Levi's leadership and, in the 1970s and 1980s, many scholars in the social sciences were attracted to the school's influence in law and economics, including Nobel laureates Ronald Coase and Gary Becker and the most cited legal scholar of the 20th century, Richard A. Posner.[9] Longstanding members of the law school faculty have included Cass Sunstein and Richard Epstein, two of the three most-cited legal scholars of the early 21st century, 44th U.S. President Barack Obama and U.S. Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia, John Paul Stevens and Elena Kagan.

The law school's chief publication is the University of Chicago Law Review, which is among the top five most cited law reviews in the world.[10] Students edit three other independent law journals, with another three journals overseen by faculty. The law school was originally housed in Stuart Hall, a Gothic-style limestone building on the campus's main quadrangles. Since 1959, it has been housed in an Eero Saarinen-designed building across the Midway Plaisance from the main campus of the University of Chicago. The building was expanded in 1987 and again in 1998. It was renovated in 2008, preserving most of Saarinen's original structure.

History

Establishment of a new law school in Chicago

 
View of the University of Chicago from the Midway Plaisance

When the University of Chicago was founded in 1892, its president William Rainey Harper expressed a desire to establish a law school for the university that would improve democratic government.[11] At the time, Harper observed that, "[t]hus far democracy seems to have found no way of making sure that the strongest men should be placed in control of the country's business."[12] Harper took advice from a number of his contemporaries. One such adviser, a professor at the University of Cambridge, suggested that the object of the new law school should be to train students to become "leaders of the bar and ornaments of the bench, inspiring teachers, scientific writers and wise reformers" and emphasising public law and comparative law.[13] Another adviser, a member of the Chicago bar, suggested that Harvard Law School, led by Christopher Columbus Langdell and influenced by the casebook method at the time, had "lost touch with great leaders among jurists and lawyers" and that the new law school in Chicago should focus on "social economics" or "principles of statesmanship" for lawyers.[13] Noted legal scholar Ernst Freund suggested that the law school promote an interdisciplinary approach to legal education, offering elective courses in subjects such as history and political science.[14] Ultimately, Harper settled with the view that the study of law should not occur in a vacuum, and that it should take into account "the whole field of man as a social being".[13]

In 1901, Harper announced that the new law school would be established the following year. He requested assistance from the faculty of Harvard Law School, whose dean at the time, James Barr Ames, granted professor Joseph Henry Beale a two-year leave of absence to serve as the first dean of the law school in Chicago. He did so on the condition that Chicago "have ideals and methods similar to [those of] the Harvard Law School".[13] However, Ames objected to the proposed curriculum, which contemplated close affiliation with social science departments in the university and subjects that were not found in a traditional first-year law curriculum. He insisted that the faculty comprise "solely of persons who teach law in the strict sense of the word" and using the casebook method.[13] Harper agreed to these terms, and together with Beale assembled the faculty and designed the curriculum. Harper departed from the understanding he had reached with Ames and hired Freund to teach property law, and the law school's curriculum was influenced by Freund's interdisciplinary approach. The founding faculty members were Blewett Harrison Lee and Julian Mack, who had both taught at the law school of Northwestern University; James Parker Hall, who had taught at Stanford Law School and turned down an offer to teach at Harvard Law School; Clarke Butler Whittier, who had also taught at Stanford; Harry A. Bigelow, a notable scholar at Boston University who recognised limitations in the casebook method;[15] and Freund.[11]

Founding and early period

On October 1, 1902, the law school opened for classes in the University Press Building (currently the Bookstore Building). John D. Rockefeller paid the $250,000 construction cost, and President Theodore Roosevelt laid its cornerstone.[16] At the time of its opening, the law school consisted of 78 students (76 men and two women). It offered courses in contract law, torts, criminal law, property law, agency, and pleading, with electives in administrative law, corporations law, federal jurisdiction, Roman law, international law, and legal ethics.[13] The law school invented the J.D. degree,[17][11] and was just one of five law schools in the U.S. that required a college degree from its applicants as a prerequisite to admission.[18] Its library, which was established in short order, housed some 18,000 volumes of law reports. In 1903, a year after the law school opened, enrolment at the law school grew rapidly as its student body increased to 126. Floyd R. Mechem, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School and pioneer in empirical legal studies at the time, joined the faculty and remained at the law school for 25 years until his death in 1928.[19][13]

 
President Theodore Roosevelt laying the cornerstone for the law school on April 2, 1903, after receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws[20]

The law school prospered in its early years and fostered relationships with scholars in other fields, including economics, political science, psychology, and history.[13] It also developed ties with members of the Chicago bar, who served as part-time faculty members and taught legal procedure and other practical courses. The law school's academic standards were recognized as at least equal to those of Harvard.[11] In 1904, the law school moved to Stuart Hall on the main university campus. In the same year, Sophonisba Breckinridge became the first woman to graduate from the law school––a feat that had not yet been achieved at Yale Law School, Columbia Law School or Harvard. In her autobiography, Breckinridge noted that "the fact that the law school, like the rest of the University ... accepted men and women students on equal terms was publicly settled".[21] The law school also established its first alumni association in this period.[22]

The law school faced considerable change in the years leading up to World War I and shortly thereafter. Beale returned to Harvard after his two-year leave of absence. In 1909, the eminent jurist Roscoe Pound taught at the law school for a year.[11] The law school established a chapter of the Order of the Coif in 1911 and the Edward W. Hinton Moot Court program in 1914. During World War I, enrollment declined: in Spring 1917, 241 students were enrolled; this number dropped to 46 by Fall 1918. In 1920, Earl B. Dickerson became the first African-American to graduate from the law school. The law school's Black Law Students Association is named in his honor.[23] Following the war, in 1926, enrollment reached 500 students for the first time. In 1927, the law school began to offer its first seminars. Its longest-serving dean, James Parker Hall, who played a significant role in recruiting numerous distinguished faculty members to the law school, died in office in 1928.[24]

Growth in interdisciplinary approach and the leadership of Edward Levi

 
The law school, depicted in a postcard from the 1910s

In the 1930s, new dean Harry A. Bigelow built on the interdisciplinary foundations laid by Freund and introduced classes in accounting, economics, and psychology. The law school's curriculum was shaped by the emerging influence of the law and economics movement. Aaron Director and Henry Simons began offering economics courses in 1933.[25] Faculty member Edward Levi also introduced economics in the antitrust course, permitting Director to teach one of every five classroom sessions.[26] The first volume of the University of Chicago Law Review was also published in 1933.[27] The law school established a legal writing program in 1938 and the Law and Economics Program in 1939. The LL.M. program was established in 1942, while Harry A. Bigelow Teaching Fellowships were established in 1947. As was the case during World War I, enrolment at the law school, like at many of the other top law schools in the country, declined and its academic calendar was adjusted to meet military needs.[28]

In the 1950s and 1960s, the law school experienced a period of profound growth and expansion under the leadership of Edward Levi, who was appointed Dean in 1950. In 1951, Karl Llewellyn and Soia Mentschikoff joined the law school, the latter being the first woman on the faculty. Other notable scholars, widely regarded as institutional figures and leading thinkers in their respective areas,[29] were Walter J. Blum and Bernard D. Meltzer, who studied and taught at the law school for their entire academic careers. Between 1953 and 1955, Supreme Court justice John Paul Stevens taught antitrust at the law school. In 1958, Director founded the Journal of Law and Economics. In 1959, the law school moved to its current building on 60th Street, designed by Eero Saarinen. In 1960, constitutional law scholar Philip Kurland founded the Supreme Court Review. Levi later served as the Provost (1962–1968) and the President (1968–1975) of the University of Chicago, before becoming the United States Attorney General under President Gerald Ford. During his time at the law school, Levi also supported the Committee on Social Thought graduate program.[30]

Late 20th century

By the 1970s and 1980s, the law and economics movement had attracted a series of scholars with strong connections to the social sciences, such as Nobel laureates Ronald Coase and Gary Becker and scholars Richard A. Posner and William M. Landes. In 1972, Posner founded the Journal of Legal Studies. The law school also established joint degree programs with the Committee on Public Policy Studies and the Department of Economics, complementing Max Rheinstein's Foreign Law Program, which was established in the 1950s with a bequest from the Ford Foundation. The Legal History Program was established in 1981.[31] In 1982, the Federalist Society was established by a group of students at the law school, together with students from Harvard Law School and Yale Law School. In 1989, the D'Angelo Law Library exceeded 500,000 volumes.[22]

 
Nobel laureate Ronald Coase taught at the law school from 1964 to 2013

In the same period, many scholars who would later become leaders in their field joined the law school faculty at an early stage in their careers. Richard A. Epstein, identified in a Legal Affairs poll as one of the most influential legal thinkers of modern times,[32] joined the faculty in 1973 and continues to serve as emeritus professor and senior lecturer. Geoffrey R. Stone, a leading First Amendment scholar and alumnus and former dean of the law school, joined the faculty in the same year. Douglas G. Baird, a luminary in bankruptcy law, has been on the faculty since 1980 and served as dean between 1994 and 1999. Cass Sunstein, regarded as "the most cited legal scholar in the United States and probably the world",[33] began his teaching career at the law school in 1981 and served as a faculty member for 27 years. Former U.S. Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia served as a professor between 1977 and 1982.[34] His future colleague on the Supreme Court, Elena Kagan, began her career at the law school too, as did noted legal scholars Lawrence Lessig and Adrian Vermeule. The 44th President of the U.S. Barack Obama taught at the law school between 1992 and 2004 in the areas of constitutional law, racism and the law, and voting rights before he was elected to the U.S. Senate.[35]

Academics

The law school currently employs more than 200 full-time and part-time faculty members and enrolls approximately 600 students in its Juris Doctor (J.D.) program.[36] It also offers advanced legal degrees such as the Master of Laws (LL.M.) (or alternatively the M.C.L.), the Master of Legal Studies (M.L.S.) and the Doctor of Jurisprudence (J.S.D.).[37] The J.D. degree may be combined with a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) or Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) with the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, a Master of Arts (A.M.) in international relations, a Master of Public Policy (M.P.P.) with the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy, or a Master of Divinity (M.Div.) with the University of Chicago Divinity School.[38]

The law school's professors use the Socratic Method to facilitate learning in lectures and seminars. This method includes calling on students without prior notice, presenting hypotheticals, and continuously questioning them to test their knowledge and application of the material and to flesh out underlying assumptions in their responses.[7] It is one of the few law schools in the United States that employs this mode of teaching, which is assisted by its high student-to-professor ratio.[39]

D'Angelo Law Library

 
Laird Bell Quadrangle fountain in front of the D'Angelo Law Library.

The D'Angelo Law Library is part of the greater University of Chicago library system. Renovated in 2006, it features a second-story reading room. The Law Library is open 90 hours per week and employs 11 full-time librarians and 11 additional managers and staff members. It has study space for approximately 500 people, a wireless network and 26 networked computers. It contains over 700,000 volumes of books, with approximately 6,000 added each year, including materials in over 25 languages, and primary law from foreign countries and international organizations.[52]

Admissions and cost

Admission to the J.D. program is highly competitive: in 2021, the law school enrolled 175 students from an applicant pool of 6,514. Overall, the acceptance rate was 11.91% [2] For the entering class of 2024, the 25th and 75th LSAT percentiles were 169 and 175, respectively, with a median of 172. The 25th and 75th undergraduate GPA percentiles were 3.82 and 3.98, respectively, with a median of 3.91.[2]

Admission into the LL.M. program is also competitive: in 2020, the law school reported that it had received approximately 1,000 applications for 80 positions.[53]

The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees and living expenses) at the law school for the 2017–18 academic year was $93,414.[54]

Grading

The law school employs a grading system that places students on a scale of 155–186. The scale was 55–86 prior to 2003, but since then the law school has used a prefix of "1" to eliminate confusion with the traditional 100 point grading scale. For classes of more than 10 students, professors are required to set the median grade at 177, with the number of grades above 180 approximately equaling the number of grades below a 173.[55]

In an article published in The New York Times in 2010, business writer Catherine Rampell criticized other schools' problems with grade inflation, but commended Chicago's system, saying that Chicago "has managed to maintain the integrity of its grades."[56]

A student graduates "with honors" if he or she attains a final average of 179, "with high honors" upon attaining a final average of 180.5, and "with highest honors" upon attaining a final average of 182. The last of these achievements is rare; typically only one student every few years will attain the requisite 182 average. Additionally, the law school awards two honors at graduation that are based on class rank. Of the students who earned at the law school at least 79 of the 105 credits required to graduate, the top 10% are elected to the Order of the Coif.[57] Students finishing their first or second years in the top 5% of their class, or graduating in the top 10%, are honored as "Kirkland and Ellis Scholars."[57]

Employment

Outcomes and career prospects

In 2018, the law school was ranked first in the U.S. for overall employment outcomes by the National Law Journal[58] and second in the U.S. for best career prospects by Forbes.[59] According to the law school's official 2020 ABA-required disclosures, 98.5% of the Class of 2019 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment within ten months of graduation.[54] The median salary for its graduates in the Class of 2019 was $190,000, and 75% of graduates earned starting salaries of $190,000 or greater upon graduation.[54] For the same cohort, 50.2% of graduates secured positions at law firms with more than 500 lawyers.[54] The law school is ranked first in the U.S. by the National Law Journal for placing the highest percentage of recent graduates in law firms of 100 or more lawyers.[60] It also had the highest first-time Bar pass rate (98.9%) of all law schools in the United States.[54]

Judicial clerkships

The law school is ranked first in the U.S. by the National Law Journal for placing the highest percentage of recent graduates in federal clerkships.[60] A recent study reported that the law school has the third-highest gross and third-highest per capita placement of alumni in Supreme Court of the United States clerkships among all law schools since 1882.[61] Between 1992 and 2017, it placed 88 alumni in Supreme Court of the United States clerkships. In the Class of 2019, 27.6% of its graduates secured clerkships (with 87.3% of those graduates in federal clerkships).[54] In the 2022, nine of the law school's alumni clerked on the Supreme Court.[62]

Rankings

The law school has a reputation as one of the best and most prestigious law schools in the world based on major education publications and rankings. The university is also included in the T14, a classification of consistently highest ranking U.S. law schools. It is ranked:

Publications and organizations

Journals

The law school produces seven professional journals. Four of those journals are student-run: the University of Chicago Law Review, the Chicago Journal of International Law, the University of Chicago Legal Forum, and the University of Chicago Business Law Review.[72][73] The University of Chicago Law Review is among the top five most cited law reviews in the world.[10][better source needed] The other three are overseen by faculty: the Supreme Court Review, the Journal of Law and Economics and the Journal of Legal Studies.[74]

Academic paper series

The law school produces several series of academic papers, including the Kreisman Working Papers Series in Housing Law and Policy, the Coase-Sandor Working Paper Series in Law and Economics, the Fulton Lectures, and the Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers, in addition to a series of occasional papers.[75]

Organizations

There are approximately 60 student-run organizations at the law school which fall under the umbrella of the Law Students Association.[76] It is home to one of the three founding chapters of the Federalist Society. As a professor, former Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia helped to organize the Chicago chapter of the society.[34] Chicago is also home to a large chapter of the progressive American Constitution Society for Law and Policy.[77]

Architecture

 
The Laird Bell Quadrangle. Eero Saarinen designed the present law school building, opened 1959.

The law school was originally housed in Stuart Hall, a Gothic-style limestone building on the campus's main quadrangles. Needing more library and student space, the law school moved across the Midway Plaisance to its current, Eero Saarinen-designed building (next to what was then the headquarters of the American Bar Association) in October 1959. The building contains classrooms, the D'Angelo Law Library, faculty offices, and an auditorium and courtroom, arranged in a quadrangle around a fountain (mimicking the college Gothic architecture of the campus's main quadrangles). The year saw a number of celebrations of the law school's new home, including a filming of The Today Show and appearances by Chief Justice Earl Warren, Governor (and later Vice President) Nelson Rockefeller and Secretary-General of the United Nations Dag Hammarskjöld.[78]

In 1987, and over the objections of the Saarinen family, the building was expanded to add office and library space (and the library renamed in honor of alumnus Dino D'Angelo). In 1998, a dedicated space for the law school's clinics, the Arthur Kane Center for Clinical Legal Education, as well as numerous additional classrooms, were constructed.[78] Renovation of the library, classrooms, offices, and fountain was completed in 2008, notable for the preservation of most of Saarinen's structure at a time when many modernist buildings faced demolition.[79][80]

Deans

Notable faculty

The law school's faculty has included the 44th U.S. President Barack Obama, Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia, John Paul Stevens and Elena Kagan, leaders of the legal realism movement Karl Llewellyn and Herman Oliphant, tax law doyen Walter J. Blum, leading constitutional law scholars Harry Kalven and Michael W. McConnell, founder of the law and literature movement James Boyd White, and one of the most widely-cited legal scholars in the world, Cass Sunstein. Its current faculty includes Kyoto Prize winner Martha Nussbaum, distinguished legal philosopher Brian Leiter, First Amendment scholar Geoffrey R. Stone, federal appellate judges Frank H. Easterbrook and Diane P. Wood, bankruptcy expert Douglas Baird, prominent legal historian Richard H. Helmholz, and among the most widely-cited legal scholars of the 20th and 21st centuries Richard A. Posner, Richard A. Epstein and Eric Posner.[81][82][83]

Current

Former

Notable alumni

The law school has produced many distinguished alumni in the judiciary, government and politics, academia, business, and other fields. Its alumni include heads of state and politicians around the world, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, the President of the Supreme Court of Israel, judges of United States Courts of Appeals, several U.S. Attorneys General and Solicitors General, members of Congress and cabinet officials, Privy Counsellors, university presidents and faculty deans, founders of the law firms Kirkland & Ellis, Baker McKenzie, and Jenner & Block, CEOs and chairpersons of multinational corporations, and contributors to literature, journalism, and the arts. The law school counts among its alumni recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Fulbright Scholars, Rhodes Scholars, Marshall Scholars, Commonwealth Fellows, National Humanities Medallists, and Pulitzer Prize winners.

In the judiciary, notable alumni include Lord Thomas, who served as Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales from 2013 to 2017, and former President of the Supreme Court of Israel, Shimon Agranat. Federal appellate judges who graduated from the law school include Douglas H. Ginsburg, David S. Tatel, Michael W. McConnell and Robert Bork, who was unsuccessfully nominated to the U.S. Supreme Court. Other federal appellate judges include Abner Mikva, who later served as White House Counsel in the Clinton administration; Frank H. Easterbrook, who currently teaches at the law school; and Jerome Frank, who served as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and, together with fellow alumnus Herman Oliphant, played a leading role in the legal realism movement in the U.S.

Notable alumni in government and politics include Attorneys General John Ashcroft, Ramsey Clark and Edward H. Levi, who was Dean of the law school from 1950 to 1962. The last Solicitor General of the United States, Noel Francisco, graduated from the law school in 1996. Other graduates include the former Prime Minister of New Zealand, Geoffrey Palmer; prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials and drafter of the U.N. Charter, Bernard D. Meltzer; former FBI director, James Comey; former United States Secretary of the Interior and key figure in the implementation of the New Deal, Harold L. Ickes; former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, Abraham Ribicoff; the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Richard Cordray; former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone; current U.S. senator Amy Klobuchar, and U.S. Representative and United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack Vice-Chair Liz Cheney, among other members of Congress.

Alumni who are leaders in higher education include the current president of Princeton University, Christopher L. Eisgruber; the current Dean of the University of Texas School of Law, Ward Farnsworth; the former Dean of Stanford Law School, Larry Kramer; the co-chair of the COVID-19 Advisory Board, head of Operation Warp Speed, and former Dean of the Yale School of Medicine, David A. Kessler; the former Dean of Cornell Law School, Roger C. Cramton; and the former Dean of Vanderbilt University Law School, Tulane University Law School and Cornell Law School, William Ray Forrester. Scholars who graduated from the law school include Harvard Law School professor Mary Ann Glendon, who is a former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See; First Amendment scholar Geoffrey R. Stone; tax law doyen Walter J. Blum; and one of the pre-eminent constitutional law scholars of the 20th century, Harry Kalven.[9]

In business, notable alumni include the billionaire and founder of the Carlyle Group, David Rubenstein; the former CEO and president of Bloomberg L.P. and the current CEO of Sidewalk Labs, Daniel L. Doctoroff; the executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels Corporation, Thomas Pritzker; the chairman and president of Compass Lexecon and an emeritus professor at the law school, Daniel Fischel; former president of Weyerhaeuser and of Boy Scouts of America, Norton Clapp; the current commissioner of the NBA, Adam Silver; and the founder of Yammer, David O. Sacks. In the field of non-governmental organizations, alumni include the founder and CEO of the International Justice Mission, Gary Haugen; and co-founder of Amnesty International, Luis Kutner.

The law school also counts among its alumni four recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom; two Pulitzer Prize winners; the first female African-American U.S. senator, Carol Moseley Braun; the first African-American to serve as a United States federal judge, James Benton Parsons; civil rights attorney and chairman of the Fair Employment Practices Committee, Earl B. Dickerson; the first female president of the American Law Institute and of the American Bar Association, Roberta Cooper Ramo; Pulitzer Prize-winner Studs Terkel; civil rights activist and the first woman to graduate from the law school, Sophonisba Breckinridge; and the founder of the intelligent design movement, Phillip E. Johnson.

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External links

  • Official website  
  • Guide to the University of Chicago Law School Arbitration Study Records 1916-1966 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center
  • Guide to the University of Chicago Law School Jury Project Records 1953-1959 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

Coordinates: 41°47′09″N 87°35′55″W / 41.78583°N 87.59861°W / 41.78583; -87.59861

university, chicago, school, school, university, chicago, private, research, university, chicago, illinois, consistently, ranked, among, best, most, prestigious, schools, world, many, distinguished, alumni, judiciary, academia, government, politics, business, . The University of Chicago Law School is the law school of the University of Chicago a private research university in Chicago Illinois It is consistently ranked among the best and most prestigious law schools in the world and has many distinguished alumni in the judiciary academia government politics and business It employs more than 180 full time and part time faculty and hosts more than 600 students in its Juris Doctor program while also offering the Master of Laws Master of Studies in Law and Doctor of Juridical Science degrees in law 2 The law school has the highest percentage of recent graduates clerking for federal judges 5 The University of Chicago Law SchoolParent schoolUniversity of ChicagoEstablished1902 121 years ago 1902 School typePrivate law schoolParent endowment 11 6 billion 1 DeanThomas J MilesLocationChicago Illinois U S Enrollment626 2021 2 Faculty183 2021 2 USNWR ranking3rd 2023 3 Bar pass rate97 9 2020 4 Websitewww wbr law wbr uchicago wbr eduABA profileStandard 509 Report 2021 The law school was conceived in the 1890s by the president of the University of Chicago William Rainey Harper Harper and the law school s first Dean Joseph Henry Beale designed the school s curriculum with inspiration from Ernst Freund s interdisciplinary approach to legal education 6 The construction of the school was financed by John D Rockefeller and the cornerstone was laid by President Theodore Roosevelt The law school opened for classes in 1902 Since its inception the law school s professors have taught students using the Socratic Method which remains the law school s predominant mode of teaching in lectures and seminars 7 In the 1930s the interdisciplinary nature of the law school s curriculum was further shaped by the law and economics movement Economists Aaron Director and Henry Calvert Simons taught courses integrated with the antitrust curriculum taught by statesman Edward H Levi leading to the development of the Chicago school of economics and the Chicago School approach to antitrust law 8 The law school expanded rapidly in the 1950s under Levi s leadership and in the 1970s and 1980s many scholars in the social sciences were attracted to the school s influence in law and economics including Nobel laureates Ronald Coase and Gary Becker and the most cited legal scholar of the 20th century Richard A Posner 9 Longstanding members of the law school faculty have included Cass Sunstein and Richard Epstein two of the three most cited legal scholars of the early 21st century 44th U S President Barack Obama and U S Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia John Paul Stevens and Elena Kagan The law school s chief publication is the University of Chicago Law Review which is among the top five most cited law reviews in the world 10 Students edit three other independent law journals with another three journals overseen by faculty The law school was originally housed in Stuart Hall a Gothic style limestone building on the campus s main quadrangles Since 1959 it has been housed in an Eero Saarinen designed building across the Midway Plaisance from the main campus of the University of Chicago The building was expanded in 1987 and again in 1998 It was renovated in 2008 preserving most of Saarinen s original structure Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment of a new law school in Chicago 1 2 Founding and early period 1 3 Growth in interdisciplinary approach and the leadership of Edward Levi 1 4 Late 20th century 2 Academics 2 1 Clinics 2 2 Research centers 2 3 Policy initiatives 2 4 Programs 2 5 D Angelo Law Library 3 Admissions and cost 4 Grading 5 Employment 5 1 Outcomes and career prospects 5 2 Judicial clerkships 6 Rankings 7 Publications and organizations 7 1 Journals 7 2 Academic paper series 7 3 Organizations 8 Architecture 9 Deans 10 Notable faculty 10 1 Current 10 2 Former 11 Notable alumni 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditEstablishment of a new law school in Chicago Edit View of the University of Chicago from the Midway Plaisance When the University of Chicago was founded in 1892 its president William Rainey Harper expressed a desire to establish a law school for the university that would improve democratic government 11 At the time Harper observed that t hus far democracy seems to have found no way of making sure that the strongest men should be placed in control of the country s business 12 Harper took advice from a number of his contemporaries One such adviser a professor at the University of Cambridge suggested that the object of the new law school should be to train students to become leaders of the bar and ornaments of the bench inspiring teachers scientific writers and wise reformers and emphasising public law and comparative law 13 Another adviser a member of the Chicago bar suggested that Harvard Law School led by Christopher Columbus Langdell and influenced by the casebook method at the time had lost touch with great leaders among jurists and lawyers and that the new law school in Chicago should focus on social economics or principles of statesmanship for lawyers 13 Noted legal scholar Ernst Freund suggested that the law school promote an interdisciplinary approach to legal education offering elective courses in subjects such as history and political science 14 Ultimately Harper settled with the view that the study of law should not occur in a vacuum and that it should take into account the whole field of man as a social being 13 In 1901 Harper announced that the new law school would be established the following year He requested assistance from the faculty of Harvard Law School whose dean at the time James Barr Ames granted professor Joseph Henry Beale a two year leave of absence to serve as the first dean of the law school in Chicago He did so on the condition that Chicago have ideals and methods similar to those of the Harvard Law School 13 However Ames objected to the proposed curriculum which contemplated close affiliation with social science departments in the university and subjects that were not found in a traditional first year law curriculum He insisted that the faculty comprise solely of persons who teach law in the strict sense of the word and using the casebook method 13 Harper agreed to these terms and together with Beale assembled the faculty and designed the curriculum Harper departed from the understanding he had reached with Ames and hired Freund to teach property law and the law school s curriculum was influenced by Freund s interdisciplinary approach The founding faculty members were Blewett Harrison Lee and Julian Mack who had both taught at the law school of Northwestern University James Parker Hall who had taught at Stanford Law School and turned down an offer to teach at Harvard Law School Clarke Butler Whittier who had also taught at Stanford Harry A Bigelow a notable scholar at Boston University who recognised limitations in the casebook method 15 and Freund 11 Founding and early period Edit On October 1 1902 the law school opened for classes in the University Press Building currently the Bookstore Building John D Rockefeller paid the 250 000 construction cost and President Theodore Roosevelt laid its cornerstone 16 At the time of its opening the law school consisted of 78 students 76 men and two women It offered courses in contract law torts criminal law property law agency and pleading with electives in administrative law corporations law federal jurisdiction Roman law international law and legal ethics 13 The law school invented the J D degree 17 11 and was just one of five law schools in the U S that required a college degree from its applicants as a prerequisite to admission 18 Its library which was established in short order housed some 18 000 volumes of law reports In 1903 a year after the law school opened enrolment at the law school grew rapidly as its student body increased to 126 Floyd R Mechem a professor at the University of Michigan Law School and pioneer in empirical legal studies at the time joined the faculty and remained at the law school for 25 years until his death in 1928 19 13 President Theodore Roosevelt laying the cornerstone for the law school on April 2 1903 after receiving the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws 20 The law school prospered in its early years and fostered relationships with scholars in other fields including economics political science psychology and history 13 It also developed ties with members of the Chicago bar who served as part time faculty members and taught legal procedure and other practical courses The law school s academic standards were recognized as at least equal to those of Harvard 11 In 1904 the law school moved to Stuart Hall on the main university campus In the same year Sophonisba Breckinridge became the first woman to graduate from the law school a feat that had not yet been achieved at Yale Law School Columbia Law School or Harvard In her autobiography Breckinridge noted that the fact that the law school like the rest of the University accepted men and women students on equal terms was publicly settled 21 The law school also established its first alumni association in this period 22 The law school faced considerable change in the years leading up to World War I and shortly thereafter Beale returned to Harvard after his two year leave of absence In 1909 the eminent jurist Roscoe Pound taught at the law school for a year 11 The law school established a chapter of the Order of the Coif in 1911 and the Edward W Hinton Moot Court program in 1914 During World War I enrollment declined in Spring 1917 241 students were enrolled this number dropped to 46 by Fall 1918 In 1920 Earl B Dickerson became the first African American to graduate from the law school The law school s Black Law Students Association is named in his honor 23 Following the war in 1926 enrollment reached 500 students for the first time In 1927 the law school began to offer its first seminars Its longest serving dean James Parker Hall who played a significant role in recruiting numerous distinguished faculty members to the law school died in office in 1928 24 Growth in interdisciplinary approach and the leadership of Edward Levi Edit The law school depicted in a postcard from the 1910s In the 1930s new dean Harry A Bigelow built on the interdisciplinary foundations laid by Freund and introduced classes in accounting economics and psychology The law school s curriculum was shaped by the emerging influence of the law and economics movement Aaron Director and Henry Simons began offering economics courses in 1933 25 Faculty member Edward Levi also introduced economics in the antitrust course permitting Director to teach one of every five classroom sessions 26 The first volume of the University of Chicago Law Review was also published in 1933 27 The law school established a legal writing program in 1938 and the Law and Economics Program in 1939 The LL M program was established in 1942 while Harry A Bigelow Teaching Fellowships were established in 1947 As was the case during World War I enrolment at the law school like at many of the other top law schools in the country declined and its academic calendar was adjusted to meet military needs 28 In the 1950s and 1960s the law school experienced a period of profound growth and expansion under the leadership of Edward Levi who was appointed Dean in 1950 In 1951 Karl Llewellyn and Soia Mentschikoff joined the law school the latter being the first woman on the faculty Other notable scholars widely regarded as institutional figures and leading thinkers in their respective areas 29 were Walter J Blum and Bernard D Meltzer who studied and taught at the law school for their entire academic careers Between 1953 and 1955 Supreme Court justice John Paul Stevens taught antitrust at the law school In 1958 Director founded the Journal of Law and Economics In 1959 the law school moved to its current building on 60th Street designed by Eero Saarinen In 1960 constitutional law scholar Philip Kurland founded the Supreme Court Review Levi later served as the Provost 1962 1968 and the President 1968 1975 of the University of Chicago before becoming the United States Attorney General under President Gerald Ford During his time at the law school Levi also supported the Committee on Social Thought graduate program 30 Late 20th century Edit By the 1970s and 1980s the law and economics movement had attracted a series of scholars with strong connections to the social sciences such as Nobel laureates Ronald Coase and Gary Becker and scholars Richard A Posner and William M Landes In 1972 Posner founded the Journal of Legal Studies The law school also established joint degree programs with the Committee on Public Policy Studies and the Department of Economics complementing Max Rheinstein s Foreign Law Program which was established in the 1950s with a bequest from the Ford Foundation The Legal History Program was established in 1981 31 In 1982 the Federalist Society was established by a group of students at the law school together with students from Harvard Law School and Yale Law School In 1989 the D Angelo Law Library exceeded 500 000 volumes 22 Nobel laureate Ronald Coase taught at the law school from 1964 to 2013 In the same period many scholars who would later become leaders in their field joined the law school faculty at an early stage in their careers Richard A Epstein identified in a Legal Affairs poll as one of the most influential legal thinkers of modern times 32 joined the faculty in 1973 and continues to serve as emeritus professor and senior lecturer Geoffrey R Stone a leading First Amendment scholar and alumnus and former dean of the law school joined the faculty in the same year Douglas G Baird a luminary in bankruptcy law has been on the faculty since 1980 and served as dean between 1994 and 1999 Cass Sunstein regarded as the most cited legal scholar in the United States and probably the world 33 began his teaching career at the law school in 1981 and served as a faculty member for 27 years Former U S Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia served as a professor between 1977 and 1982 34 His future colleague on the Supreme Court Elena Kagan began her career at the law school too as did noted legal scholars Lawrence Lessig and Adrian Vermeule The 44th President of the U S Barack Obama taught at the law school between 1992 and 2004 in the areas of constitutional law racism and the law and voting rights before he was elected to the U S Senate 35 Academics EditThe law school currently employs more than 200 full time and part time faculty members and enrolls approximately 600 students in its Juris Doctor J D program 36 It also offers advanced legal degrees such as the Master of Laws LL M or alternatively the M C L the Master of Legal Studies M L S and the Doctor of Jurisprudence J S D 37 The J D degree may be combined with a Master of Business Administration M B A or Doctor of Philosophy Ph D with the University of Chicago Booth School of Business a Master of Arts A M in international relations a Master of Public Policy M P P with the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy or a Master of Divinity M Div with the University of Chicago Divinity School 38 The law school s professors use the Socratic Method to facilitate learning in lectures and seminars This method includes calling on students without prior notice presenting hypotheticals and continuously questioning them to test their knowledge and application of the material and to flesh out underlying assumptions in their responses 7 It is one of the few law schools in the United States that employs this mode of teaching which is assisted by its high student to professor ratio 39 Clinics Edit The law school offers seven legal clinics in which students earn course credit while practicing law under the direction of the clinic s independent faculty 40 Edwin F Mandel Legal Aid Clinic including Abrams Environmental Law Clinic Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project Criminal and Juvenile Justice Project Clinic Employment Law Clinic Federal Criminal Justice Clinic Housing Initiative Transactional Clinic Immigrants Rights Clinic Global Human Rights Clinic Exoneration Project Clinic Innovation Clinic Institute for Justice Clinic on Entrepreneurship Jenner amp Block Supreme Court and Appellate Clinic Kirkland amp Ellis Corporate Lab Clinic Research centers Edit The law school has six research centers and projects Each center hosts events activities and guest speakers throughout the academic year They are as follows 41 Becker Friedman Institute for Research in Economics Coase Sandor Institute for Law and Economics 42 Constitutional Law Institute 43 Center for Comparative Constitutionalism 44 Center for Law Philosophy and Human Values 45 Center on Law and Finance 46 Policy initiatives Edit The law school has five current and past policy initiatives 47 Animal Law Policy Initiative 2004 2007 Court Reform in the Juvenile Justice System Federal Tax Conference Foster Care to Adulthood 2005 2008 International Best Standards for Guest Worker Programs 2015 2017 Kanter Project on Mass Incarceration 2013 Programs Edit Legal History Program 48 The John M Olin Program in Law and Economics 49 International and Comparative Law 50 Law and Philosophy 51 D Angelo Law Library Edit Laird Bell Quadrangle fountain in front of the D Angelo Law Library The D Angelo Law Library is part of the greater University of Chicago library system Renovated in 2006 it features a second story reading room The Law Library is open 90 hours per week and employs 11 full time librarians and 11 additional managers and staff members It has study space for approximately 500 people a wireless network and 26 networked computers It contains over 700 000 volumes of books with approximately 6 000 added each year including materials in over 25 languages and primary law from foreign countries and international organizations 52 Admissions and cost EditAdmission to the J D program is highly competitive in 2021 the law school enrolled 175 students from an applicant pool of 6 514 Overall the acceptance rate was 11 91 2 For the entering class of 2024 the 25th and 75th LSAT percentiles were 169 and 175 respectively with a median of 172 The 25th and 75th undergraduate GPA percentiles were 3 82 and 3 98 respectively with a median of 3 91 2 Admission into the LL M program is also competitive in 2020 the law school reported that it had received approximately 1 000 applications for 80 positions 53 The total cost of attendance indicating the cost of tuition fees and living expenses at the law school for the 2017 18 academic year was 93 414 54 Grading EditThe law school employs a grading system that places students on a scale of 155 186 The scale was 55 86 prior to 2003 but since then the law school has used a prefix of 1 to eliminate confusion with the traditional 100 point grading scale For classes of more than 10 students professors are required to set the median grade at 177 with the number of grades above 180 approximately equaling the number of grades below a 173 55 In an article published in The New York Times in 2010 business writer Catherine Rampell criticized other schools problems with grade inflation but commended Chicago s system saying that Chicago has managed to maintain the integrity of its grades 56 A student graduates with honors if he or she attains a final average of 179 with high honors upon attaining a final average of 180 5 and with highest honors upon attaining a final average of 182 The last of these achievements is rare typically only one student every few years will attain the requisite 182 average Additionally the law school awards two honors at graduation that are based on class rank Of the students who earned at the law school at least 79 of the 105 credits required to graduate the top 10 are elected to the Order of the Coif 57 Students finishing their first or second years in the top 5 of their class or graduating in the top 10 are honored as Kirkland and Ellis Scholars 57 Employment EditOutcomes and career prospects Edit In 2018 the law school was ranked first in the U S for overall employment outcomes by the National Law Journal 58 and second in the U S for best career prospects by Forbes 59 According to the law school s official 2020 ABA required disclosures 98 5 of the Class of 2019 obtained full time long term JD required employment within ten months of graduation 54 The median salary for its graduates in the Class of 2019 was 190 000 and 75 of graduates earned starting salaries of 190 000 or greater upon graduation 54 For the same cohort 50 2 of graduates secured positions at law firms with more than 500 lawyers 54 The law school is ranked first in the U S by the National Law Journal for placing the highest percentage of recent graduates in law firms of 100 or more lawyers 60 It also had the highest first time Bar pass rate 98 9 of all law schools in the United States 54 Judicial clerkships Edit The law school is ranked first in the U S by the National Law Journal for placing the highest percentage of recent graduates in federal clerkships 60 A recent study reported that the law school has the third highest gross and third highest per capita placement of alumni in Supreme Court of the United States clerkships among all law schools since 1882 61 Between 1992 and 2017 it placed 88 alumni in Supreme Court of the United States clerkships In the Class of 2019 27 6 of its graduates secured clerkships with 87 3 of those graduates in federal clerkships 54 In the 2022 nine of the law school s alumni clerked on the Supreme Court 62 Rankings EditThe law school has a reputation as one of the best and most prestigious law schools in the world based on major education publications and rankings The university is also included in the T14 a classification of consistently highest ranking U S law schools It is ranked third of all law schools in the world third in the U S by the Academic Ranking of World Universities 63 fourth in the world second in the U S by the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 64 first in the U S by Above the Law 65 and second by Business Insider 66 third in the U S by U S News amp World Report 67 outranking Harvard Law School for the first time in over two decades 68 second in the U S in terms of scholarly impact in a 2021 study by Gregory Sisk et al 69 second in the U S for best career prospects by Forbes 59 third in the U S for highest earning graduates by Forbes 70 third in the U S for best professors and for federal clerkships by the Princeton Review 71 fourth in the U S for best classroom experience by the Princeton Review 71 Publications and organizations EditJournals Edit The law school produces seven professional journals Four of those journals are student run the University of Chicago Law Review the Chicago Journal of International Law the University of Chicago Legal Forum and the University of Chicago Business Law Review 72 73 The University of Chicago Law Review is among the top five most cited law reviews in the world 10 better source needed The other three are overseen by faculty the Supreme Court Review the Journal of Law and Economics and the Journal of Legal Studies 74 Academic paper series Edit The law school produces several series of academic papers including the Kreisman Working Papers Series in Housing Law and Policy the Coase Sandor Working Paper Series in Law and Economics the Fulton Lectures and the Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers in addition to a series of occasional papers 75 Organizations Edit There are approximately 60 student run organizations at the law school which fall under the umbrella of the Law Students Association 76 It is home to one of the three founding chapters of the Federalist Society As a professor former Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia helped to organize the Chicago chapter of the society 34 Chicago is also home to a large chapter of the progressive American Constitution Society for Law and Policy 77 Architecture Edit The Laird Bell Quadrangle Eero Saarinen designed the present law school building opened 1959 The law school was originally housed in Stuart Hall a Gothic style limestone building on the campus s main quadrangles Needing more library and student space the law school moved across the Midway Plaisance to its current Eero Saarinen designed building next to what was then the headquarters of the American Bar Association in October 1959 The building contains classrooms the D Angelo Law Library faculty offices and an auditorium and courtroom arranged in a quadrangle around a fountain mimicking the college Gothic architecture of the campus s main quadrangles The year saw a number of celebrations of the law school s new home including a filming of The Today Show and appearances by Chief Justice Earl Warren Governor and later Vice President Nelson Rockefeller and Secretary General of the United Nations Dag Hammarskjold 78 In 1987 and over the objections of the Saarinen family the building was expanded to add office and library space and the library renamed in honor of alumnus Dino D Angelo In 1998 a dedicated space for the law school s clinics the Arthur Kane Center for Clinical Legal Education as well as numerous additional classrooms were constructed 78 Renovation of the library classrooms offices and fountain was completed in 2008 notable for the preservation of most of Saarinen s structure at a time when many modernist buildings faced demolition 79 80 Deans EditJoseph Henry Beale 1902 1904 James Parker Hall 1904 1928 Harry A Bigelow 1929 1939 Wilber G Katz 1939 1950 Edward H Levi 1950 1962 Phil C Neal 1963 1975 Norval Morris 1975 1979 Gerhard Casper 1979 1987 Geoffrey R Stone 1987 1993 Douglas Baird 1994 1999 Daniel Fischel 1999 2001 Saul Levmore 2001 2009 Michael H Schill 2010 2015 Thomas J Miles 2015 present Notable faculty EditThe law school s faculty has included the 44th U S President Barack Obama Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia John Paul Stevens and Elena Kagan leaders of the legal realism movement Karl Llewellyn and Herman Oliphant tax law doyen Walter J Blum leading constitutional law scholars Harry Kalven and Michael W McConnell founder of the law and literature movement James Boyd White and one of the most widely cited legal scholars in the world Cass Sunstein Its current faculty includes Kyoto Prize winner Martha Nussbaum distinguished legal philosopher Brian Leiter First Amendment scholar Geoffrey R Stone federal appellate judges Frank H Easterbrook and Diane P Wood bankruptcy expert Douglas Baird prominent legal historian Richard H Helmholz and among the most widely cited legal scholars of the 20th and 21st centuries Richard A Posner Richard A Epstein and Eric Posner 81 82 83 Current Edit Daniel Abebe constitutional law and international law scholar Douglas Baird scholar on bankruptcy law and contracts William Baude scholar on constitutional law and interpretation Omri Ben Shahar contracts and consumer protection scholar Lisa Bernstein contracts and commercial law scholar Curtis Bradley international law and foreign relations scholar Emily Buss scholar on children and parents rights Anthony J Casey alumnus scholar on business law finance and bankruptcy Kenneth W Dam emeritus alumnus scholar on law and economics and international law Dhammika Dharmapala economist and tax scholar Frank H Easterbrook alumnus United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and leading antitrust scholar Richard A Epstein emeritus scholar on classical liberalism libertarianism torts Roman Law contract and law and economics Daniel Fischel emeritus alumnus law and economics scholar and chairman and president of Compass Lexecon Tom Ginsburg scholar on international and comparative law Richard H Helmholz legal historian and expert on European legal history M Todd Henderson alumnus scholar on corporations law and securities regulation William H J Hubbard alumnus civil procedure and law and economics scholar Aziz Huq scholar on constitutional law federal courts and criminal procedure Dennis J Hutchinson alumnus constitutional law scholar and former editor of the Supreme Court Review Alison LaCroix legal historian and constitutional law scholar William Landes economist and law and economics scholar Brian Leiter legal philosopher and scholar on Nietzsche Saul Levmore former Dean of the law school and scholar on commercial law and public choice Jonathan Masur behavioral law and economics patent law and administrative law scholar Thomas J Miles law and economics scholar Jennifer Nou scholar on administrative law and regulatory policy Martha Nussbaum influential philosopher and expert on ancient Greek and Roman philosophy political philosophy feminism and ethics Randal C Picker alumnus scholar on antitrust and intellectual property law Eric Posner scholar on international law and contract law and one of the most cited law professors in the U S Richard A Posner former federal appellate judge and the most cited legal scholar of the 20th century 9 John Rappaport criminal procedure and criminal law scholar Gerald N Rosenberg leading scholar on political science and law and author of The Hollow Hope 1991 Andrew M Rosenfield alumnus economist CEO and managing partner of TGG Group and managing partner of Guggenheim Partners Geoffrey R Stone alumnus leading scholar on constitutional law and the First Amendment Lior Strahilevitz property law and privacy law scholar David A Strauss constitutional law scholar Diane P Wood Chief United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit Former Edit Mortimer J Adler Amabel Anderson Arnold Paul M Bator Stephanos Bibas Harry A Bigelow Walter J Blum alumnus Lea Brilmayer Gerhard Casper Ronald Coase winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences Morris Raphael Cohen Brainerd Currie David P Currie Kenneth Culp Davis Aaron Director Ulrich Drobnig Owen M Fiss Ernst Freund Elizabeth Garrett Grant Gilmore Douglas Ginsburg alumnus Jack Goldsmith Philip Hamburger Bernard Harcourt Geoffrey C Hazard Jr Edward W Hinton after whom the Hinton Moot Court Competition is named 84 James F Holderman Elena Kagan Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Dan Kahan Harry Kalven alumnus Stanley Nider Katz Nicholas Katzenbach former Attorney General of the United States Friedrich Kessler Spencer L Kimball Larry Kramer alumnus Anthony Kronman Philip Kurland John H Langbein Douglas Laycock alumnus Lawrence Lessig Karl Llewellyn Edward Levi former Attorney General of the United States alumnus Jonathan R Macey Julian Mack Michael W McConnell alumnus Tracey Meares alumnus Bernard D Meltzer alumnus Soia Mentschikoff Abner Mikva alumnus William R Ming alumnus Norval Morris Edward R Morrison alumnus Dallin H Oaks alumnus Barack Obama 1992 to 2004 former President of the United States Herman Oliphant alumnus Douglas H Parker Eduardo Penalver Roscoe Pound George L Priest alumnus John Mark Ramseyer Max Rheinstein Antonin Scalia former Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Michael H Schill Stephen Schulhofer Richard Scott Baron Scott of Foscote former Lord of Appeal Henry Simons A W B Simpson Anne Marie Slaughter John Paul Stevens former Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Cass Sunstein Jacobus tenBroek Adrian Vermeule James Boyd White Hans ZeiselNotable alumni EditMain article List of University of Chicago Law School alumni The law school has produced many distinguished alumni in the judiciary government and politics academia business and other fields Its alumni include heads of state and politicians around the world the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales the President of the Supreme Court of Israel judges of United States Courts of Appeals several U S Attorneys General and Solicitors General members of Congress and cabinet officials Privy Counsellors university presidents and faculty deans founders of the law firms Kirkland amp Ellis Baker McKenzie and Jenner amp Block CEOs and chairpersons of multinational corporations and contributors to literature journalism and the arts The law school counts among its alumni recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom Fulbright Scholars Rhodes Scholars Marshall Scholars Commonwealth Fellows National Humanities Medallists and Pulitzer Prize winners In the judiciary notable alumni include Lord Thomas who served as Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales from 2013 to 2017 and former President of the Supreme Court of Israel Shimon Agranat Federal appellate judges who graduated from the law school include Douglas H Ginsburg David S Tatel Michael W McConnell and Robert Bork who was unsuccessfully nominated to the U S Supreme Court Other federal appellate judges include Abner Mikva who later served as White House Counsel in the Clinton administration Frank H Easterbrook who currently teaches at the law school and Jerome Frank who served as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and together with fellow alumnus Herman Oliphant played a leading role in the legal realism movement in the U S Notable alumni in government and politics include Attorneys General John Ashcroft Ramsey Clark and Edward H Levi who was Dean of the law school from 1950 to 1962 The last Solicitor General of the United States Noel Francisco graduated from the law school in 1996 Other graduates include the former Prime Minister of New Zealand Geoffrey Palmer prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials and drafter of the U N Charter Bernard D Meltzer former FBI director James Comey former United States Secretary of the Interior and key figure in the implementation of the New Deal Harold L Ickes former Secretary of Health Education and Welfare Abraham Ribicoff the first director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Richard Cordray former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone current U S senator Amy Klobuchar and U S Representative and United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack Vice Chair Liz Cheney among other members of Congress Alumni who are leaders in higher education include the current president of Princeton University Christopher L Eisgruber the current Dean of the University of Texas School of Law Ward Farnsworth the former Dean of Stanford Law School Larry Kramer the co chair of the COVID 19 Advisory Board head of Operation Warp Speed and former Dean of the Yale School of Medicine David A Kessler the former Dean of Cornell Law School Roger C Cramton and the former Dean of Vanderbilt University Law School Tulane University Law School and Cornell Law School William Ray Forrester Scholars who graduated from the law school include Harvard Law School professor Mary Ann Glendon who is a former U S ambassador to the Holy See First Amendment scholar Geoffrey R Stone tax law doyen Walter J Blum and one of the pre eminent constitutional law scholars of the 20th century Harry Kalven 9 In business notable alumni include the billionaire and founder of the Carlyle Group David Rubenstein the former CEO and president of Bloomberg L P and the current CEO of Sidewalk Labs Daniel L Doctoroff the executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels Corporation Thomas Pritzker the chairman and president of Compass Lexecon and an emeritus professor at the law school Daniel Fischel former president of Weyerhaeuser and of Boy Scouts of America Norton Clapp the current commissioner of the NBA Adam Silver and the founder of Yammer David O Sacks In the field of non governmental organizations alumni include the founder and CEO of the International Justice Mission Gary Haugen and co founder of Amnesty International Luis Kutner The law school also counts among its alumni four recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom two Pulitzer Prize winners the first female African American U S senator Carol Moseley Braun the first African American to serve as a United States federal judge James Benton Parsons civil rights attorney and chairman of the Fair Employment Practices Committee Earl B Dickerson the first female president of the American Law Institute and of the American Bar Association Roberta Cooper Ramo Pulitzer Prize winner Studs Terkel civil rights activist and the first woman to graduate from the law school Sophonisba Breckinridge and the founder of the intelligent design movement Phillip E Johnson References Edit As of FY2021 University of Chicago endowment ended FY21 at 11 6 billion uchicago news a b c d e Chicago University of 2021 Standard 509 Information Report PDF December 14 2021 University of Chicago U S News amp World Report Best Law Schools Retrieved July 27 2021 University of Chicago 2021 Consumer Bar Passage Report PDF Law Grads Hiring Report Job Stats for the Class of 2020 Law com Nussbaum Martha C 2017 Why Lawyers Need a Broad Social Education PDF Thomson Reuters a b The Socratic Method law uchicago edu Retrieved November 28 2020 Kitch Edmund W 1983 The Fire of Truth A Remembrance of Law and Economics at Chicago 1932 1970 Journal of Law amp Economics 26 1 163 234 doi 10 1086 467030 JSTOR 725189 S2CID 153525815 a b c Shapiro Fred R 2000 The Most Cited Legal Scholars Journal of Legal Studies 29 1 409 26 doi 10 1086 468080 S2CID 143676627 a b TaxProf Blog 2020 Meta Ranking of Flagship U S Law Reviews a b c d e Paul D Carrington The Missionary Diocese of Chicago 44 Journal of Legal Education 467 1994 William Rainey Harper The Trend in Higher Education 31 Chicago 1905 a b c d e f g h Frank L Ellsworth Law on the Midway The Founding of the University of Chicago Law School 33 Chicago 1977 Boyer John W R 2015 The University of Chicago A History University of Chicago Press p 439 ISBN 9780226242651 Tefft Sheldon Harry A Bigelow Law School Record University of Chicago Boyer John W R 2015 The University of Chicago A History University of Chicago Press p 438 ISBN 9780226242651 Herbermann et al 1915 Catholic Encyclopedia New York Encyclopedia Press Accessed 26 May 2008 What is the difference between the LL B degree and the J D degree Ask a Librarian asklib law harvard edu Retrieved January 19 2020 Edward W Hinton Floyd Russell Mechem 23 Illinois Law Review 591 1929 The Law School Record chicagounbound uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Giselle Roberts and Melissa Walker eds Southern Women in the Progressive Era A Reader 2019 a b The University of Chicago Magazine June 2003 magazine uchicago edu Retrieved October 9 2018 Dingwall Christopher Rachel Watson Guide to the Earl B Dickerson Papers Chicago Public Library Mapping the Stacks accessed September 3 2011 James Parker Hall New York Times www nytimes com March 19 1928 Aaron Director Founder of the field of Law and Economics University of Chicago News Office September 13 2004 Retrieved April 29 2010 Sunstein Cass R 2018 Legal Reasoning and Political Conflict Oxford University Press p 68 ISBN 9780190864460 1 About the Law Review Boyer John W R 2015 The University of Chicago A History University of Chicago Press p 440 ISBN 9780226242651 Joseph Isenbergh Walter Blum 55 University of Chicago Law Review 734 1988 Press Release Edward H Levi former U S Attorney General President Emeritus of the university and the Glen A Lloyd Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the law school and the College dies at 88 News uchicago edu Retrieved on August 15 2013 Boyer John W R 2015 The University of Chicago A History University of Chicago Press p 441 ISBN 9780226242651 Who Are the Top 20 Legal Thinkers in America Legal Affairs Retrieved July 4 2008 Holberg Prize and Nils Klim Prize Laureates 2018 Announced Holbergprisen March 10 2017 Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved March 14 2018 a b Shipp E R July 26 1986 Scalia s Midwestern colleagues cite his love of debate poker and piano The New York Times retrieved January 13 2010 President Obama returns to the Law School University of Chicago www uchicago edu Retrieved January 21 2021 Standard 509 Disclosure www abarequireddisclosures org Retrieved October 9 2018 Admissions University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Dual Degrees and Certificate Granting Programs University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Schneider Jack December 2013 Remembrance of Things Past A History of the Socratic Method in the United States Curriculum Inquiry 43 5 613 640 doi 10 1111 curi 12030 S2CID 42448911 Clinics University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Research Centers University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Coase Sandor Institute for Law and Economics University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved July 5 2022 Constitutional Law Institute University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved July 5 2022 Center for Comparative Constitutionalism University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved July 5 2022 Center for Law Philosophy and Human Values University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved July 5 2022 Center on Law and Finance University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved July 5 2022 Chicago Policy Initiatives University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Legal History Program University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 The Olin Foundation and Support for Law and Economics Research University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 International and Comparative Law University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Law and Philosophy University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Facts about the D Angelo Law Library The D Angelo Law Library The University of Chicago Library www lib uchicago edu Retrieved October 9 2018 Announcements PDF www law uchicago edu September 1 2020 Retrieved October 3 2020 a b c d e f Standard 509 Disclosure www abarequireddisclosures org Retrieved January 10 2021 1 18 Grading University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved October 9 2018 Rampell Catherine June 21 2010 In Law Schools Grades Go Up Just Like That The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 2 2015 a b 4 16 J D Honors University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved December 5 2019 The Top Law Schools With The Best Employment Outcomes Above the Law April 19 2017 Retrieved July 6 2018 a b The Best Law Schools For Career Prospects In 2018 Forbes Retrieved January 10 2021 a b Law Grads Hiring Report Job Stats for the Class of 2017 Retrieved May 6 2018 Brian Leiter Supreme Court Clerkship Placement 2000 Through 2008 Terms www leiterrankings com Retrieved November 28 2020 Nine Clerks for Nine Justices in 2021 2022 Marking New Alumni Clerkship Record at the Supreme Court University of Chicago Law School Retrieved April 5 2021 ShanghaiRanking s Global Ranking of Academic Subjects 2020 Law Academic Ranking of World Universities Archived from the original on July 13 2019 Retrieved November 22 2020 World University Rankings 2021 by subject law Times Higher Education World University Rankings October 26 2020 Retrieved November 22 2020 The 2021 Top Law School Rankings Are Finally Here Above the Law June 24 2021 Retrieved August 3 2021 The 50 best law schools in America Business Insider Retrieved September 14 2018 2023 Best Law Schools U S News amp World Report Retrieved March 28 2022 Sloan Karen March 29 2022 Harvard drops out of top 3 in annual law school rankings Reuters Retrieved April 5 2022 Sisk Gregory C Catlin Nicole Veenis Katherine Zeman Nicole 2021 Scholarly Impact of Law School Faculties in 2021 Updating the Leiter Score Ranking for the Top Third SSRN 3910536 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The 25 Law Schools Whose Grads Earn The Most Forbes Retrieved January 10 2021 a b University of Chicago Law School The Princeton Review Retrieved January 10 2021 Journals University of Chicago Law School Law School Launches Student Led Business Law Journal University of Chicago Law School Journals University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Academic Paper Series University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved October 9 2018 Student Organisation Directory University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 American Constitution Society University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 a b Building a Future on a Strong Foundation University of Chicago Law School Law uchicago edu Retrieved on August 15 2013 Saarinen s Law School Wasn t Razed WSJ com Online wsj com October 8 2008 Retrieved on 2013 08 15 Cityscapes New luster for a Saarinen gem Once threatened U of C Law School building is expertly recycled by OWP P Featuresblogs chicagotribune com July 1 2008 Retrieved on 2013 08 15 Faculty Directory University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 18 2021 Jodi Kantor July 30 2008 Teaching Law Testing Ideas Obama Stood Slightly Apart New York Times www nytimes com Retrieved January 18 2021 Hundley Tom March 22 2009 Ivory Tower of Power Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 21 2021 The Camaraderie and Competition of the Hinton Moot Court University of Chicago Law School www law uchicago edu Retrieved January 28 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Chicago Law School Official website Guide to the University of Chicago Law School Arbitration Study Records 1916 1966 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Guide to the University of Chicago Law School Jury Project Records 1953 1959 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Coordinates 41 47 09 N 87 35 55 W 41 78583 N 87 59861 W 41 78583 87 59861 Retrieved 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