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24 Jul 2011, 7:29 am by Walter Olson
” Related: “How law schools are helping the elite” [Brian Tamanaha, Balkinization] And it rather missed the point for the underlying NYT report to call law schools “singular creature of American capitalism” [Larry Ribstein] Earlier: Theodore Seto via Taxprof, Stephen Bainbridge, Tags: law schools Related posts WSJ: John McGinnis reviews Schools for Misrule (2) William Henderson, Andrew Morriss: “It’s Time to Restore Morality to Law… [read post]
19 Jul 2011, 9:15 am by Lawrence Solum
Kanishka Jayasuriya (University of Adelaide) has posted Institutional Hybrids and the Rule of Law as a Regulatory Project (LEGAL PLURALISM AND DEVELOPMENT: DIALOGUES FOR SUCCESS, Brian Tamanaha, Caroline Sage, Michael Woolcock, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2011) on SSRN. [read post]
12 Jul 2011, 12:06 pm by Paul Caron
Brian Tamanaha (Washington U.), How Law Schools are Helping the Elite: The top schools, with some variation, distribute scholarships roughly along these lines: 50% of the students pay full fare, 25% get a discount of half or more, 25% get less than half off, and a handful of students enjoy... [read post]
10 Jul 2011, 7:35 am by Lawrence Solum
Introduction Back in the day (by which I mean the mid-70s through the mid-90s) big normative theories were all the rage in the legal academy. [read post]
5 Jul 2011, 7:46 am by Larry Ribstein
Ted Seto responds to Brian Tamanaha’s post about the price of legal education. [read post]
5 Jul 2011, 3:35 am by Paul Caron
Tamanaha (Washington U.), The Crunch Is Coming for Law Schools: Brian, my prior post addressed the NY Times study and your elaboration on it, not the question of tuition. [read post]
1 Jul 2011, 8:10 am by James Milles
Brian Tamanaha notes some of the likely effects on law schools: The 2010 acceptance numbers suggest that many law schools are already in a worrisome spot. [read post]
1 Jul 2011, 3:15 am by Max Kennerly
Brian Tamanaha’s pessimistic view about the fortunes of law schools going forward, while Stephen Bainbridge blames the government, implicitly (and ironically) suggesting the government step in to close profitable law schools down. [read post]
1 Jul 2011, 1:22 am by Michael Heise
Over at Balkinization, Brian Tamanaha (Wash U) assesses trends involving the market demand for new attorneys and law school enrollment (here). [read post]
29 Jun 2011, 5:49 pm by Kim Krawiec
Thoughts from Brian Tamanaha and Steve Bainbridge on what “The Lawyer Surplus” means for law schools Update: And Ribstein     Follow @KimKrawiec [read post]
29 Jun 2011, 12:11 pm by Larry Ribstein
  Brian Tamanaha adds data that should cut more deeply into the hearts of the really important group (I’m referring to law professors, of course):  falling applications, rising enrollments. [read post]
29 Jun 2011, 10:38 am by Steve Bainbridge
With that background in mind, consider this post from Brian Tamanaha: The New York Times released a chart yesterday showing that law schools are churning out far more lawyers than the number of available legal positions. [read post]
29 Jun 2011, 9:30 am by Paul Caron
Following up on yesterday's post, NY Times -- The Lawyer Surplus, State by State: The Coming Crunch for Law Schools, by Brian Tamanaha (Washington U.): The New York Times released a chart yesterday showing that law schools are churning out far more lawyers than the number of available legal positions.... [read post]
23 May 2011, 10:30 am by Paul Caron
Brian Tamanaha (Washington U.), Information About Law Schools, Circa 1960: The Cost of Attending: The AALS produced a comprehensive study of law schools in the late 1950s, sending detailed surveys to 129 law schools, with a 90% response rate. [read post]
19 May 2011, 9:03 pm by Sandy Levinson
Indeed, as our fellow blogger Brian Tamanaha has demonstrated, even the pre-Realists knew full well that it actually mattered who the judges were precisely because they did not all share the same vision of the Constitution. [read post]
3 May 2011, 9:47 pm by Dan Ernst
It includes reviews of Brian Tamanaha's Beyond the Formalist-Realist Divide: The Role of Politics in Judging; Barry Friedman's The Will of the People: How Public Opinion Has Influenced the Supreme Court and Shaped the Meaning of the Constitution; and William J. [read post]