BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL




Established 1929
School type Jesuit
President William P. Leahy, SJ
Location Newton, Massachusetts, USA
Enrollment 750
students
Campus Suburban
Homepage http://www.bc.edu/schools/law/



'Boston College Law School', known colloquially as 'BC Law', is one of the six professional graduate schools at Boston College. Located approximately 1.5 miles from the main Boston College campus in Chestnut Hill, Boston College Law School is situated on a 40-acre wooded campus in Newton, Massachusetts. With approximately 800 students and 125 faculty members, the Law School is the largest of BC's seven graduate and professional schools.[1] Admission to BC Law is among the most selective in the United States, with approximately 7,000 applicants for the 275 places in the first year class in 2005.[2] 25% of the students are AHANA. Reflecting its Jesuit heritage, BC Law has established programs in human rights, social justice and public interest law. Its faculty has played a significant national role arguing for the repeal of the Solomon Amendment, presenting oral arguments before the United States Supreme Court in ''Rumsfeld v. FAIR''.
Over the past several years BC Law graduates have received post-graduate fellowships in the public interest field, including the Skadden Fellowship, the Soros Justice Fellowship, and the NAPIL Equal Justice Fellowship. The Law School was listed by NAPIL as among the top 25 law schools for commitment to loan repayment assistance and easing student debt. BC Law currently provides over $120,000 each year in loan repayment assistance to graduates pursuing public interest careers, an increase of over 50% from prior years. BC Law has also consistently been ranked in the top 5 by US News in Most Collegiate Law Schools, and the friendly atmosphere has led Vault.com to name it the Disney land of law schools. In 2007, the National Law Journal ranked Boston College Law School in the top 20 schools based on law schools with the highest percentage of graduates hired by the top American law firms. [3]

Contents
History
Rankings
Curriculum
Libraries
Law Review publications
Student statistics
Research centers & institutes
Notable alumni
Trivia
See also
References
External links

History


Although provisions for a law school were included in the original charter for Boston College, ratified by the General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1863, Boston College Law School was formally organized in the 1920s and opened its doors on September 26, 1929. It was accredited by the American Bar Association in 1932 and the Association of American Law Schools in 1937. Originally located in the Lawyer's Building opposite the Massachusetts State House in central Boston, it moved to the main Boston College campus in 1954 and to its present 40-acre campus, the home of the former Newton College of the Sacred Heart, in 1975. Boston College has consistently been ranked a top-tier law school since law school rankings began being published.

Rankings


The U.S. News and World Report 2007 Law School Rankings placed Boston College Law School 28th in the country.
Regarding the prestige of the program, Brody Admissions ranks BC Law as the 23rd most prestigious law school in the United States, third in New England. [4]
Regarding recruiting at the top law firms in the country, the National Law Journal ranked Boston College Law School in the top 15 law schools because of the large number of graduates the school places in the top American law firms. Harvard was the only other Boston school that placed in the top 20 for recruiting. [5]

Curriculum


In addition to J.D., M.A. and Ph.D. programs, Boston College Law School offers joint degrees with BC's Carroll School of Management (J.D./M.B.A.), Graduate School of Social Work (J.D./M.S.W.) and Lynch School of Education (J.D./M.Ed.). Joint degrees in the humanities, fine arts, natural sciences and social sciences are offered with BC's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
BC Law also offers two programs abroad: the Semester in London Program and the Semester in The Hague Program with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.
Speakers also frequently attend the law school. Past speakers have included supreme court justices, federal appellate court judges and famous scholars of law.

Libraries


Boston College

In a new building opened in 1996, the Law Library is located on the Boston College Law School campus in Newton, Massachusetts and contains approximately 500,000 volumes covering all major areas of American law and primary legal materials from the federal government, Canada, the United Kingdom, the United Nations, and the European Union. The library also features a substantial treatise and periodical collection and a growing collection of international and comparative law material. The library's Coquillette Rare Book Room houses works from the fifteenth through nineteenth centuries, including works by and about Saint Thomas More.
In addition, Boston College Law students may enjoy the eight other graduate and undergraduate libraries of Boston College, many of which are in the gothic style buildings on the main campus. A portion of Bapst Library on the main campus is reserved for graduate students.

Law Review publications


Boston College Law School maintains six student-run publications. The Boston College Law Review is the oldest scholarly publication at the law school. The Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review is the nation's second oldest law review dedicated solely to environmental law and considered one of the most prestigious environmental law reviews in the country. The Boston College International & Comparative Law Review is one of approximately 30 law reviews in the United States that focus on international legal issues. The Third World Law Journal is a unique legal periodical that fills the need for a progressive, alternative legal perspective on issues both within the United States and in the developing world.
The Uniform Commercial Code Reporter-Digest is the only student-written publication at Boston College Law School published by a private corporation.[6]
Boston College is also the first law school to implement a completely online publication, the Intellectual Property and Technology Forum, providing research articles on issues of copyright, trademark and patent law.[7]

Student statistics


The total enrollment for BC Law is 800 students. 21% of the student population are students of color and 2% of the population are international students. The student/faculty ratio is 14:1 and 98% of students are employed at graduation. The median starting private salary is $125,000 a year. 49% of the law students receive grant assistance to pay for their education.
The 2006 entering class was composed of 257 students (from 6322 applicants) and it had a median LSAT score of 164 and a median GPA of 3.58. There were 31 students with graduate degrees.
Gothic Library with Graduate Student Area

Research centers & institutes



Center for Human Rights and International Justice

★ Business Institute, Boston College

★ Center for Asset Management

★ Center for Corporate Citizenship (CCC)

★ Center for East Europe, Russia and Asia

★ Center for Ignatian Spirituality

★ Center for International Higher Education

★ Center For Investment Research And Management

★ Institute for the Study and Promotion of Race and Culture (ISPRC)

★ International Study Center

★ Irish Institute

★ Jesuit Institute

★ Small Business Development Center

★ Urban Ecology Institute

★ Winston Center for Leadership and Ethics

★ Women's Resource Center
BC Law Grads are known as Legal Eagles by large Boston firms

Notable alumni




Brigida Benitez, JD 1993, President, Hispanic Bar Association; proposed alternative nominee for the United States Supreme Court[8]

Harold Berman, JD 1994, executive director, United States Jewish Federation

Edward P. Boland, JD 1936, former United States Congressman; author of the Boland Amendment

Garrett J. Bradley, JD 1995, member of the Mass. House of Representatives (''served'' 2000 - ''present'')

Gary Buseck, JD 1980, Executive Director, Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders

Mike Capuano, JD 1977, United States Congressman

Paul Cellucci, JD 1973, former Governor of Massachusetts, former US Ambassador to Canada

Robert W. Clifford, JD 1962, Maine Supreme Judicial Court justice

Silvio Conte, JD 1949, former United States Congressman

Bill Delahunt, JD 1967, United States Congressman

Dannel P. Malloy, JD 1977, Mayor of Stamford Connecticut

John Dooley, LLB 1968, Vermont Supreme Court justice

Bob Downes, JD 1968, Alaska Superior Court Judge

James B. Eldridge, JD 2000, member of the Mass. House of Representatives (''served'' 2002 - ''present'')

Michael S. Greco, JD 1972, President, American Bar Association

Margaret Heckler, JD 1956, former United States Congresswoman, former US Secretary of Health and Human Services, former US Ambassador to Ireland

John Kerry, JD 1976, United States Senator, 2004 Democratic candidate for President of the United States

Ed Markey, JD 1972, United States Congressman

Mark D. Poindexter, JD 1994, Deputy Chief Administrative Law Judge, Washington, DC

James A. Redden LLD 1954, Senior Judge, U.S. District Court; former Attorney General and State Treasurer of Oregon

Charles E. Rice JD 1956, Author, Legal Scholar, and Professor of Law

Thomas Reilly JD 1970, Attorney General of Massachusetts, 2006 Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate

Warren Rudman, JD 1960, former United States Senator and New Hampshire attorney general

Thomas Salmon, JD 1957, former Governor of Vermont

Bobby Scott, JD 1973, United States Congressman

Francis X. Spina, JD 1971, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court justice

Michael A. Sullivan, JD 1985, Mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts

Anthony E. Varona, JD 1992, General Counsel and Legal Director, Human Rights Campaign

Diane Wilkerson, JD 1981, first African-American Massachusetts state senator

Debra Wong Yang, JD 1984, United States Attorney for the Central District of California

Gerald T. Zerkin, JD 1976, Federal Public Defender for Zacarias Moussaoui

Charles Redding Pitt, JD 1977, Former U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Alabama

Trivia



★ The Boston College Club is an exclusive club located on the top floor of a Boston skyscraper. BC Law events are often held at the club.

★ Stemming from the nickname of Boston College athletics teams, the term "Legal Eagle" is used to refer to students and alumni of Boston College Law School.

★ The term "Triple Eagle," which technically refers to a recipient of any three degrees from Boston College, is usually used to designate graduates of Boston College High School, Boston College, and BC Law.

★ Boston College Law students popularly use the epithet "that's BC lawyering" to describe an act of exceptional wit and ingenuity that has a sense of absurdity.

See also



List of Boston College people

Presidents of Boston College

References


1. http://www.bc.edu/schools/
2. http://www.bc.edu/schools/law/about/ataglance/
3. [1]
4. prestige rankings
5. [2]
6. U.C.C. Reporter Digest
7. http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/law/st_org/iptf/
8. http://gopliberty.redstate.org/story/2005/10/8/222634/085

External links



Boston College Law School

Boston College

75th Anniversary Website

BC Law Timeline

The Boston College Club

Boston College Athletics

The Counselor at Boston College Law

Eagleionline: BC Law's Independent Student-Run Website

Boston College website
:
Boston College Schools & Colleges
:
Boston College Libraries

Boston College Athletics website

Boston College Bands Program

★ "Disambiguation." Voosen, Paul. 2005-12-07. Accessed on 2006-12-26. - An article in the ''Boston College Magazine'' about the Wikipedia article for Boston College.

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