University of California, Hastings College of the Law
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University of California, Hastings College of the Law | |
Established | 1878 |
---|---|
School type | Public |
Dean | Dean Nell Jessup Newton |
Location | San Francisco, California, USA |
Enrollment | 1300 (approx.) |
Faculty | 57 full-time; 96 adjunct |
USNWR ranking | 38 |
Bar pass rate | 84% (CA) |
Annual tuition | $28,190 |
Homepage | www.uchastings.edu |
University of California, Hastings College of the Law is a first tier law school located in the Civic Center of San Francisco, California.[1] It was founded in 1878 by Serranus Clinton Hastings, the first Chief Justice of California, as the first law school of the University of California (UC). The University of California, Hastings College of the Law is also commonly referred to as "UC Hastings" or simply "Hastings." UC Hastings was one of the first law schools in the western United States, and is one of the few university-affiliated law schools in the United States that does not sit on a general university campus. US News currently ranks Hastings 38th among all top US law schools, 17th among public schools, and 7th among law schools in the western United States.[1]
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[edit] History
Hastings has a unique relationship with the University of California. When he gave $100,000 to the University of California to start the law school named after him, Justice Serranus Clinton Hastings imposed two conditions: the school must remain in San Francisco near the courts; and it could not be governed by the Regents of the University of California. Thus, the school's leader (who holds the dual titles of Chancellor and Dean) must directly obtain funds from the California Legislature, not the UC Regents, as other UC chancellors must do.[2]
In the 1960s, Hastings began the "65 Club," the practice of hiring faculty who had been forced into mandatory retirement at age 65 from Ivy League and other elite institutions.[3] After the passage of age discrimination laws, however, the "65 Club" slowly phased out, and Hastings hired its last "65 Club" professor in 1998. In the mid-1950s, Newsweek Magazine published a story where then Harvard Law School Dean and Prominent Jurist Roscoe Pound declared, referring to UC Hastings: "Indeed, on the whole, I am inclined to think you have the strongest law faculty in the nation."[4]
[edit] Location
UC Hastings is located at 200 McAllister Street, San Francisco, CA 94102. The university spreads among three main buildings, located along the 100 and 200 blocks of McAllister Street, in San Francisco's Civic Center. It is walking distance from the Civic Center BART and MUNI stations. UC Hastings is commonly but affectionately derided by students and alums as being located in the ugliest corner of the most beautiful city in the world. Indeed, the school was once referred to affectionately as UC Tenderloin long before it chose its new nickname, UC Hastings. Nevertheless, UC Hastings offers a very safe learning environment. Located within a two-block radius of the campus is the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, the California Supreme Court, the California Court of Appeal for the First District, San Francisco Superior Court, San Francisco City Hall, United Nations Plaza (and Federal Building Annex), the San Francisco Asian Arts Museum, and the San Francisco County Public Library. The heavy concentration of public administrative buildings within the Civic Center, as well as the high crime rate, result in constant police presence in and around UC Hastings.
[edit] Organization and structure
The administrative system at UC Hastings seems as if it were designed to be as inefficient as possible and to make students' experiences as unrewarding as possible. The administration's overriding concern when structuring the current system was to make the typical student's experience seem like a three-year wait in line at the DMV. Law school is very serious, and the mediocre status of UC Hastings makes the administration obsessed with making the school appear as if it is not a tramendous failure. They have failed. Adherence to outdated ideas is extremely important for the administration as is constantly subjecting the entire student body to constant cliched pieties. UC Hastings is controlled by a nine-member Board of Directors. The UC Hastings Board of Directors exists independently of, and is not controlled by, the Regents of the University of California. Pursuant to California law, eight of the directors are appointed by the Governor of California. Pursuant to the UC Hastings constitutive documents, the ninth director must be a direct lineal descendant of UC Hastings founder Clinton Serranus Hastings.
UC Hastings' detachment from the UC Regents gives it a broad degree of independence in shaping educational and fiscal policies; however, due to a shrinking California education budget, Hastings must also compete for limited educational funds against its fellow UCs. Despite the apparent competition between the UC law schools, Hastings has been able to maintain its traditionally high standards without having to decrease class size or raise tuition prices to higher levels than fellow UC law schools.
[edit] Academics
Hastings strongly discourages independent thought and has a repressive, bland academic climate. Hastings offers a three-year Juris Doctor program with concentrated studies available in seven areas: civil litigation, criminal law, international law, public interest law, taxation, family law, and recently, a new concentration in intellectual property law. Most JD students follow a traditional three-year plan. During the first year, students take required courses as well as one elective course. In the second and third years, students may take any course or substitute or supplement their courses with judicial externships or internships, judicial clinics, or study abroad. The college also offers a one-year LL.M. degree in U.S. legal studies for students holding law degrees from foreign law programs.
[edit] Rankings
US News ranks Hastings 38th among top law schools in the US, and is the most diverse of the four law schools in the UC system.[1][5] It also has the largest student body and student/faculty ratio of the UC schools.[6] In addition, it is the least expensive law school in the UC system, and although it also grants the least financial aid, students tend to graduate with less debt on average than at UCLA, although with more than at Berkeley or Davis.[7][8][9]
According to Brian Letier's Law School rankings, Hastings ranks 27th in the nation in terms of scholarly impact as measured by academic citations of tenure-stream faculty, on par with USC.[10] In terms of student quality, Hastings ranks 38th in the nation by LSAT scores in the 75th percentile.[11]
UC Hastings is one of the top ten law schools in the nation for bar passage rate versus the average passage rate of its venue state, surpassed in California by only Stanford Law School, Boalt Hall and UCLA Law School.[12]
[edit] Publications
Inaugurated in 1997 as the publishing department at UC Hastings, the O'Brien Center for Scholarly Publications publishes seven journals on various aspects of the law.[13] The oldest journal out of the seven is the Hastings Law Journal, which was founded in 1949. The O'Brien Center also has published two books: Forgive Us Our Press Passes, by Daniel Schorr and The Traynor Reader: Essays, by the Honorable Roger Traynor.
- Hastings Law Journal
- Hastings Business Law Journal
- Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal
- Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly
- Hastings International and Comparative Law Review
- Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal
- West-Northwest Journal of Environmental Law and Policy
[edit] Notable Alumni
- Dick Ackerman (1967) - California State Senate Republican Leader
- Jeff Adachi (1985) - The Public Defender of San Francisco
- Jeffrey Amestoy (1972) - Former Chief Justice of The Vermont Supreme Court
- Nestor Barrero (1984) - Vice President and Employment Counsel for Universal Studios
- Marvin Baxter (1966) - Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court
- Michael D. Bradbury (1967) - District Attorney of Ventura County, California
- Matthew R. Broad (1984) - Executive Vice President and General Counsel for OfficeMax Incorporated
- Willie Brown (1958) - former Speaker of the California State Assembly and Mayor of San Francisco
- Melvin Brunetti (1964) - Senior Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
- Richard Bryan (1963) - Former U.S. Senator and Governor of Nevada.
- Cynthia Bryant (1995) - Office of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Deputy Chief of Staff
- James S. Bubar (1978) - Democratic candidate for US (Shadow) Representative from the District of Columbia
- Ed Case (1981) - U.S. Congressman from Hawaii's 2nd Congressional District
- Suzanne Case (1983) - Executive Director, Nature Conservancy of Hawaii
- Rachelle Chong (1984) - Current Commissioner for California PUC and former FCC Commissioner
- Carol Corrigan (1975) - Associate Justice, Supreme Court of California
- Joe Cotchett (1964) - Nationally prominent trial lawyer & famous social justice litigator, attorney for Valerie Plame
- Bill Dannemeyer (1952) - U.S. Congressman from California's 39th Congressional District (Orange County)
- Christopher Darden (1980) - prosecutor in O.J. Simpson trial
- Scott Drexel (1975) - chief prosecutor, State Bar of California
- Clair Engle (1933) - U.S. Senator from California
- Santiago Fernandez (1980) - Senior Vice President and General Counsel for The Los Angeles Dodgers
- Clara Shortridge Foltz (1881) - The first practicing female lawyer in the United States
- Philip Kan Gotanda (1978) - Award-winning playwright
- Abby Ginzberg (1975) - Award-Winning Documentary Filmmaker
- Karla Gray (1976) - Chief Justice of the Montana Supreme Court
- Kathryn Walt Hall (1972) - Former U.S. Ambassador to Austria
- Terence Hallinan (1964) - San Francisco District Attorney
- Kamala Harris (1990) - San Francisco District Attorney
- Bob Hertzberg (1979) - former Speaker of the California State Assembly and Los Angeles mayoral candidate
- Vicki Iovine (1980) - Playboy Playmate, Author
- Gregg Jarrett (1980) - Anchor, Fox News Channel
- Nick Jones (2007) - Grandson of "Deep Throat" Mark Felt, responsible for coordinating revelation of Deep Throat's identity to the media
- Parker Kennedy (1949) - President, First American Corporation
- Constance Lau (1977) - President & CEO, American Savings Bank, Honolulu
- Otto Lee (1994) - Mayor of Sunnyvale
- Jonathan P. Lowell (1985) - City Attorney for San Bruno, California
- John Maata (1977) - Senior Vice President and General Counsel for Warner Bros.
- Robert Matsui (1966) - U.S. Congressman from California's 5th Congressional District (Sacramento)
- Thomas Mesereau (1979) - Famous criminal defense attorney with a star-studded client list, including Michael Jackson and Robert Blake
- Nicholas G. Moore (1967) - Chairman of PriceWaterhouseCoopers
- George Moscone (1957) - Assassinated Mayor of San Francisco
- Paula A. Nakayama (1979) - Associate Justice of the Hawaii State Supreme Court
- John M. Ordway (1976) - U.S. Ambassador to Armenia
- Mario R. Ramil (1975) - Associate Justice of the Hawaii State Supreme Court
- Robert Rigsby (1986) - Associate Justice in the D.C. Superior Court.
- George R. Roberts (1969)- Co-Founder, of Kohlberg Kravis & Roberts Company
- Norman Seltzer - (1941) - President & Senior Managing Partner, Seltzer, Caplan, Wilkins & McMahon
- Richard Sakai (1980) - BAR/BRI Lecturer for Legal Writing, USF Law Professor
- Kevin Shelley (1980) - 28th California Secretary of State
- Douglas W. Shorenstein (1979) - Chairman/CEO, The Shorenstein Company
- Jackie Speier (1976) - U.S. Congresswoman
- Todd Spitzer (1989) - California State Assemblyman
- Marguerite Sweeney-Edralin (1977) - State Bar of California's 2007 Workers Compensation Attorney of the Year
- Kelvin Taketa (1980) - President & CEO, Hawaii Community Foundation, Director of Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc.
- Nancy Tellem (1979) - CBS Entertainment President
- Richard Thalheimer (1974) - CEO and Founder of The Sharper Image
- Tom Umberg (1980) - California State Assemblyman
- Ann Veneman (1976) - 27th U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, Executive Director of UNICEF
- Adam Wasserman (1995) - Founder of ExamSoft Worldwide, Inc.
- Michael C. Wood (1979) - President & Founder, LeapFrog Enterprises
[edit] Current Notable Faculty Members
- Bill Dodge
- David Faigman
- Calvin Massey
- Roger Park
- Joseph Grodin
- Geoffrey Hazard
- John Diamond
- William "Bill" Hutton
- Ethan Leib
- Ugo Mattei
- Mary Kay Kane
- Richard Marcus
- Joan Williams
- Charles Knapp
- James Wagstaffe
[edit] The Sixty-Five Club: Notable Deceased Faculty Members
- William Prosser, Torts
- Rudolf Schlesinger, International & Comparative Law
- Julius Stone, Jurisprudence & International Law
- Roger Traynor - Former California Supreme Court Justice
- Raymond Sullivan - Former California Supreme Court Justice
- Arthur Goldberg - Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice
- Rollin Perkins, Criminal Law & Procedure
- Richard B. Powell, Property
- Edward S. Thurston, Restitution
- Roscoe T. Steffen, Civil Law & Equity
[edit] Hastings in popular culture
- Lindsey McDonald, an attorney at the demonic law firm Wolfram and Hart in the television show Angel, was a Hastings alum.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c America's Best Graduate Schools 2008. US News. Retrieved on 2008-5-22.
- ^ Donna Domino, “Outgoing Dean Revitalized Troubled Hastings,” San Francisco Daily Journal, 6 April 2006, 1.
- ^ Charles Hillinger, "Hastings Faculty Is Anything But Retiring," Los Angeles Times, 14 December 1982, D12.
- ^ The Era of The Sixty-Five Club, http://www.uchastings.edu/?pid=2278
- ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008, Law School Diversity Index. US News. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008, What are the largest and smallest law schools?. US News. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008, Who's the priciest? Who's the cheapest?. US News. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008, Which public schools award the most and the least financial aid?. US News. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008, Whose graduates have the most debt? The least?. US News. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ Top 35 Law Faculties Based on Scholarly Impact, 2007. Brian Leiter's Law School Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
- ^ Brian Leiter's Law Schools Ranked by Student (Numerical) Quality, 2007. Brian Leiter's Law School Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
- ^ Internet Legal Research Group Rankings 2008, School versus State Average.
- ^ O'Brien Center for Scholarly Publications, http://www.uchastings.edu/?pid=47
[edit] External links
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