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Law Professors: A Profile of the Teaching Branch of the legal Profession
Authors:Donna Fossum
Institution:Donna Fossum is a Fellow at the Baldy Center for Law and Policy at Buffalo, New York, and at the time of this writing was a Research Attorney at the American Bar Foundation. B.A., 1971, University of New Mexico;M.A., 1974, J.D., 1975, State University of New York at Buffalo.
Abstract:In the United States, law schools provide the principal route of entry into the legal profession. Indeed, education in a law school is the only experience that virtually all members of the modern legal profession have in common. The gatekeeping function of law schools places the nation's law teachers in a most influential position. Although law professors play a vital role in selecting and molding the members of the profession, little research has been done on them. This article presents the results of the American Bar Foundation's first major study of law teachers. The author finds them to be a most highly credentialed group of lawyers, the overwhelming majority of whom are graduates of a small group of elite law schools. She also finds that possession of a degree from one of these schools appears to be not only highly determinative of who become law teachers but also of the nature of teachers' academic careers.
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