University of North Carolina School of Law
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University of North Carolina School of Law is a professional school within the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Established in 1845, UNC Law is among the oldest law schools in the nation. It is consistently ranked in the top-tier of law schools, and its 2007 US News and World Report ranking is 27.
With an average J.D. class size of 235, the law school has just over 700 students at any time. Attracted by the school's reputation and its affordable in-state tuition, admissions are highly competitive. For the 2006 class, 14.5% of applicants were accepted, with median LSAT score of 162 and a median GPA of 3.60.[1] At least 75% of each incoming class is from North Carolina, although roughly 75% of applications are from out-of-state.
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[edit] History
Following discussion in the North Carolina legal community, on December 12, 1842 the Trustees of the University of North Carolina authorized the University President, David L. Swain, to review and establish a law professorship. In 1845, William Battle Horn was named the first Professor of Law, and legal instruction began at the University. In the years following, Assistant Professors and later an organized faculty and law library were added. The school began taking on much of the character of a modern law school in the 1920s, after the American Bar Association first published guidelines for schools. University President Harry Woodburn Chase was instrumental in leading the efforts for this reorganization over notable opposition, including the Governor of North Carolina. [2]
[edit] Facilities
The Law School is currently located in Van Hecke-Wettach Hall, towards the southeastern side of the Chapel Hill campus, neighboring the School of Government and several athletic facilities. Opened in 1968 and renovated in 1999, the facilities are nevertheless often regarded as too small for the ever-growing programs of the school. The School is, as of fall 2006, studying an expansion of roughly 40,000 sqft, that may include a second courtroom, a larger gathering space, small classrooms, and added office space.[3]
Van Hecke-Wettach Hall includes the Kathrine R. Everett Law Library, located primarily on four floors on the back side of the building.
[edit] Centers and Initiatives
The UNC School of Law is home to several centers that focus on issues of state and national interest:
- Center for Banking and Finance
- Center for Civil Rights
- Center on Poverty, Work & Opportunity
Clinics
Community Development Law Clinic: Third year law students counsel large and small nonprofit and community development organizations.
Civil Clinic: Third year law students represent indigent clients in civil matters.
Criminal Clinic: Third year law students defend and represent juvenile defendants.
Immigration Law and Policy Clinic
[edit] Law Journals
The school is home to five student-edit law journals. The oldest, the North Carolina Law Review, was founded in 1922. This journal notable features an annual North Carolina issue reviewing developments in the state's law.
- North Carolina Law Review
- North Carolina Banking Institute Journal
- North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation
- North Carolina Journal of Law and Technology (NC JOLT)
- First Amendment Law Review
[edit] Notable Alumni
The more than 9,300 alumni[4] of the school have gone on many notable roles, including countless government offices in North Carolina. Among these are several recent NC Governors (Hunt, Holshouser, Moore, and Sanford) and (as of the 2007 term) six of the seven North Carolina Supreme Court Justices (Parker, Martin, Edmunds, Newby, Timmons-Goodson, and Hudson). Former Vice-Presidential nominee John Edwards is an alumnus and member of the faculty.
[edit] Leadership
- William Horn Battle, 1845-1868; 1877-1879 (as Professor of Law)
- John Manning, 1881-1899 (as Professor of Law)
- James Cameron MacRae, 1899-1909 (as Dean)
- Lucius Polk McGhee, 1910-1923
- Merton Leroy Ferson, 1924-1926
- Charles T. McCormick, 1927-1931
- Maurice Taylor Van Hecke, 1931-1941
- Robert Hasley Wettach, 1941-1949
- Henry Brandis, Jr., 1949-1964[2]
- James Dickson Phillips, Jr., 1964-1974
- Robert Gray Byrd, 1974-1979
- Kenneth S. Broun, 1979-1987[5]
- Judith Welch Wegner, 1989-1999
- Gene R. Nichol, 1999-2005
- John "Jack" Charles Boger, 2006-
[edit] References
- ^ Student Body Profile (accessed 21 November 2006)
- ^ a b Coates , Albert, The Story of the Law School of the University of North Carolina, North Carolina Law Review 47, Oct. 1968 Special Issue
- ^ Boger, John, From the Dean, Carolina Law Alumni News, Fall 2006 http://www.law.unc.edu/pdfs/alumninewsfall06.pdf
- ^ Carolina Law Alumni Association (accessed 21 November 2006)
- ^ The University of North Carolina School of Law: A Sesquicentennial History, North Carolina Law Review 73.
[edit] External links