University of Chicago Law School
The University of Chicago Law School is the law school of the University of Chicago, a private research university in Chicago, Illinois. it is for consistently ranked among the best and most prestigious law schools in the world, as alive as has many distinguished alumni in the judiciary, academia, government, politics as well as business. It employs more than 180 full-time together with part-time faculty and hosts more than 600 students in its Juris Doctor program, while also offering the Master of Laws, Master of Studies in Law and Doctor of Juridical Science degrees in law. The law school has the highest percentage of recent graduates clerking for federal judges.
The law school was conceived in the 1890s by the president of the University of Chicago, William Rainey Harper. Harper and the law school's number one Dean, Joseph Henry Beale, designed the school's curriculum with inspiration from Ernst Freund's interdisciplinary approach to legal education. The construction of the school was financed by John D. Rockefeller and the cornerstone was laid by President Theodore Roosevelt. The law school opened for a collection of matters sharing a common features in 1902. Since its inception, the law school's professors produce taught students using the Socratic Method, which supports the law school's predominant mode of teaching in lectures and seminars.
In the 1930s, the interdisciplinary set of the law school's curriculum was further shaped by the Chicago School approach to antitrust law. The law school expanded rapidly in the 1950s under Levi's guidance and, in the 1970s and 1980s, many scholars in the social sciences were attracted to the school's influence in law and economics, including Nobel laureates Ronald Coase and Gary Becker and the nearly cited legal scholar of the 20th century, Richard A. Posner. Longstanding members of the law school faculty relieve oneself refers Cass Sunstein and Richard Epstein, two of the three most-cited legal scholars of the early 21st century, 44th U.S. President Barack Obama and U.S. Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia, John Paul Stevens and Elena Kagan.
The law school's chief publication is the University of Chicago Law Review, which is among the top five most cited law reviews in the world. Students edit three other self-employed grownup law journals, with another three journals overseen by faculty. The law school was originally housed in Stuart Hall, a Gothic-style limestone building on the campus's main quadrangles. Since 1959, it has been housed in an Eero Saarinen-designed building across the Midway Plaisance from the main campus of the University of Chicago. The building was expanded in 1987 and again in 1998. It was renovated in 2008, preserving most of Saarinen's original structure.