PDF ABA-LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools, 2005 Edition Download
- Author: Law School Admission Council
- Publisher:
- ISBN: 9780942639926
- Category : Business & Economics
- Languages : en
- Pages : 868
eBook downloads, eBook resources & eBook authors
This guide contains the most complete, up-to-date, accurate information available for all ABA-approved law schools. The two most authoritative sources for data and information on law schoolso the LSAC, which administers the LSAT, and the ABA, which accredits the law schoolso have teamed up to provide a comprehensive law school guide featuring data and admission profiles that are available nowhere else.
This is the only Official Guide to all the American Bar Association (ABA)-approved laws in the United States, and it's the only one that contains up-to-date admission criteria and other essential admission information provided by the schools themselves. The Official Guide is the one book in which each school tells its story so that you can compare and decide which schools are best for you.
For every pre-law student, pre-law advisor, and law office, here's the only guide to law schools written and authorized by the American Bar Association. Filled with information students need in order to choose a law school--curriculum, enrollment, faculty, degrees offered, admission requirements, tuition--it also features vital statistics on bar passage rates and career placement. Charts.
Fueled by grassroots activism and a growing collection of formal political organizations, the Christian Right became an enormously influential force in American law and politics in the 1980s and 90s. While this vocal and visible political movement has long voiced grave concerns about the Supreme Court and cases such as Roe v. Wade, they weren't able to effectively enter the courtroom in a serious and sustained way until recently. During the pivot from the 20th to the 21st century, a small constellation of high-profile Christian Right leaders began to address this imbalance by investing in an array of institutions aimed at radically transforming American law and legal culture. In Separate But Faithful, Amanda Hollis-Brusky and Joshua C. Wilson provide an in-depth examination of these efforts, including their causes, contours and consequences. Drawing on an impressive amount of original data from a variety of sources, they look at the conditions that gave rise to a set of distinctly "Christian Worldview" law schools and legal institutions. Further, Hollis-Brusky and Wilson analyze their institutional missions and cultural makeup and evaluate their transformative impacts on law and legal culture to date. In doing so, they find that this movement, while struggling to influence the legal and political mainstream, has succeeded in establishing a Christian conservative beacon of resistance; a separate but faithful space from which to incrementally challenge the dominant legal culture. Both a compelling narrative of the rise of Christian Right lawyers and a trenchant analysis of how institutional networks fuel the growth of social movements, Separate But Faithful challenges the dominant perspectives of the politics of law in contemporary America.