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The Goals and Missions of Law Schools
(1990)
  • Larry D Barnett
  • W. Scott Van Alstyne, Jr, University of Florida
  • Joseph R Julin, University of Florida
Abstract

This provocative study explores the reasons for the public perception of "too many lawyers" and the failure of current legal education to meet present needs for competent legal services at an affordable cost. The principal reason for that failure, the authors argue, lies in the unquestioning acceptance of a Prestige Model created almost a century ago. The success of that model, largely unaltered to this day, has acted as a constraint on curriculum modification geared to the realities of today's society. The explosions of knowledge, population and government regulation in recent decades require recognition of the need for substantial curriculum reform. Such reform also requires recognition of differing goals and missions among the law schools. Imaginative suggestions to resolve these critical matters are made in the final portion of the study.

Keywords
  • law schools,
  • legal education
Disciplines
Publication Date
1990
Publisher
Peter Lang
Series
American university studies. Series XI, Anthropology/Sociology, v. 43
ISBN
978-0-8204-1125-5
Citation Information
Larry D Barnett, W. Scott Van Alstyne and Joseph R Julin. The Goals and Missions of Law Schools. New York(1990)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/larry_barnett/54/