Diploma privilege

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The diploma privilege is a method for lawyers to be admitted to the bar without taking a bar examination. Once used by as many as 32 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, Wisconsin is currently the only state that offers the diploma privilege for admission to its state bar. Originally used as a method to foster the growth of formal legal education the privilege began fading early last century in common with the tightening of requirements seen in other learned professions. This early trend may be exemplified by states such as California where the privilege was abolished in 1917.Most recently, West Virginia did away with the privilege in 1988 preceded by Montana and South Dakota in 1983 while Mississippi had done so in 1981.

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[edit] Diploma privilege in Wisconsin

Wisconsin's diploma privilege goes back to 1870, when it was passed as part of the same legislation that established the University of Wisconsin Law School. At that time, a law department was established in the State University and a course of study under able instructors was prescribed for students in the law department. The 1870 law provided that graduates of this department should be entitled to admission to the bar upon their certificate of graduation. This has ever since been known as "diploma privilege."

The upshot of the privilege is that, in Wisconsin, graduates of the two ABA-accredited law schools in the state—the Marquette University Law School and the University of Wisconsin Law School—may seek admission to the state bar of Wisconsin without having to sit for a bar examination. To qualify for the diploma privilege, graduates must meet certain criteria with regard to the courses they have taken in law school and their academic performance in those courses. Law graduates seeking the diploma privilege must still meet the state's character and fitness requirements.

Graduates of out-of-state law schools, even if they are Wisconsin residents, must still take the Wisconsin bar exam to be admitted in Wisconsin. Likewise, graduates of Wisconsin law schools must take the bar exam for other states in which they are going to practice. A number of U.S. states do not grant reciprocal admission for attorneys who obtained their bar admission through the diploma privilege, requiring those attorneys to take that state's bar exam, regardless of the length of that attorney's practice.


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