Loyola Law School

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Loyola Law School
File:Loyolamarymountsealsmall.jpg
Motto Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam
Established 1911 1865"1911 1865" contains a sequence that could not be interpreted against an available match matrix for date components.
School type Roman Catholic"Roman Catholic" is not in the list (Public, Private non-profit, Private for-profit, Private) of allowed values for the "School type" property.
Endowment $$500 million"$" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 500. million
Dean
Location Los Angeles, CA, US
Enrollment
Faculty (See List)
Annual tuition
Website
Outlines 0 (See List)
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Loyola Law School is located in Los Angeles, CA

Loyola Law School is the graduate law school of Loyola Marymount University, a private Jesuit school in Los Angeles, California. Loyola was established in 1920. Like Loyola University Chicago School of Law and Loyola University New Orleans College of Law (separate and unaffiliated institutions), it is named in honor of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuits. Its campus is located in downtown Los Angeles, separate from the Westchester main university campus, and was designed by Frank Gehry.

Academics

Loyola is ranked 66th (tied with 3 other schools) in the "Top Law Schools" tier of the 2008 U.S. News & World Report rankings[1], and it ranks higher on alternative guides such as the Coolely rankings (also known as the Brennan rankings)[2] in addition to The Princeton Review. For speciality rankings:

Distinct from most law schools, which are typically comprised of one or two centralized buildings, Loyola has a separate law school campus. The campus, sitting on a full city block in downtown Los Angeles, is made up of an open central plaza surrounded by several contemporary buildings designed by Frank Gehry.[8] Its recently renovated library is one of the largest private law libraries in the western U.S., with a collection of nearly 560,000 volumes.[9]

Including its day and evening J.D. programs, Loyola has the largest and most diverse student enrollment of any California law school, and it prides itself in its civic duties. It was the first California law school with a pro bono graduation requirement,[10] under which students perform 40 hours of pro bono work.[11] After Hurricane Katrina, Loyola was also one of a handful of schools to open its doors to students of law schools in New Orleans who were forced to relocate for a period of time after the hurricane.[12]

Fact sheet

Fact sheet—2006-07[13]

Loyola Law School opened its doors in 1920 and is located in downtown Los Angeles

Degrees Offered: Juris Doctor (JD); Juris Doctor/Master of Business Administration (JD/MBA); Masters of Law in Taxation (LLM); Masters of Law in American Law & International Legal Practice (International LLM)

American Bar Association Accreditation: 1937

Awarded a Chapter in The Order of the Coif: 1990

Faculty: 75 full-time faculty members

Enrollment: 1360 total—Women (50%); Minority (37%), ranked 12th in the nation for minority enrollment

Law Reviews: Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review and Loyola of Los Angeles International & Comparative Law Review

Programs: International programs in China, Costa Rica & Italy; the Learning Rights Project; the Cancer Legal Resource Center; the Disability Mediation Center; the Center for Conflict Resolution; the Disability Rights Legal Center; the Center for Juvenile Law & Policy; the Civil Justice Program; the Law & Technology Program; and the Entertainment Law Practicum

Graduate Employment Rate: 95%+ within nine months of graduation

Tuition: $33,719 full-time; $22,418 part-time

Financial Aid: 85% of Loyola Law students receive some form of financial assistance.

Alumni: Represented in all 50 states and in 16 countries

Law reviews

Loyola currently has three student-run and edited law reviews:

  • Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review is a journal of distinction devoted to the advancement of legal scholarship; recent issues of the Law Review have included articles on ICANN, Eldred v. Ashcroft, firearms ammunition and products liability, California's "three strikes" law, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and trial jury reform[14]
  • Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review is dedicated to the advancement of legal scholarship and seeks to publish scholarly, professional articles of high caliber, based on accurate and in-depth research, which advance legal scholarship in the field of international law, aid in the resolution of contemporary international legal problems, and contribute to the continuing education of the legal community[15]
  • Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review publishes scholarly articles which frequently cover topics in constitutional law, sports law, intellectual property rights, communications regulation, antitrust law, employment law, contract law, corporate law, as well as the emerging fields of computer and Internet law. ELR has also featured symposia on such topics as independent filmmaking, international rights of publicity and the use of law and identity to script cultural production[16]

Trial advocacy and moot court

Loyola's trial advocacy and moot court programs are listed below:

Programs and clinics

  • Center for Conflict Resolution, which provides mediation, conciliation, and facilitation services, as well as conflict resolution training[25]
  • Center for Juvenile Law and Policy, which serves as a holistic law firm representing youths in juvenile court; a small group of students each year are selected as participants in a year-long clinic run by the Center, receiving trial advocacy and procedure training from the Center's staff of seasoned attorneys and social workers[26]
  • Civil Justice Program, which convenes periodic conferences, seminars and presentations, promotes and publishes scholarly research, and initiates cross disciplinary projects[27]
  • Disability Rights Legal Center (DRLC) (formerly the Western Law Center for Disability Rights), one of Southern California's most active public interest centers specializing in Americans with Disabilities Act litigation;[28] DRLC is run by a mix of Loyola professors, law student externs, and attorneys, and its centers and programs include the following:
• Cancer Legal Resource Center[29]
• Civil Rights Litigation Project[30]
• Education Advocacy Project

[31]

• Disability Mediation Center[32]
• Community Outreach Program[33]
• Inland Empire Program[34]
• Options Counseling and Lawyer Referral Service[35]
• Pro Bono Attorney Program[36]
  • Entertainment Law Practicum, which provides students with hands-on experience in the entertainment industry while earning units toward their degree[37]
  • Journalist Law School, providing fellowships to journalists for an intensive legal study practicum[38]
  • Program for Law & Technology, a collaboration with the California Institute of Technology[39]
  • Public Interest Law Foundation (PILF), which is a student-run organization focused on getting students involved in public interest causes as well as raising money for public interest grants; PILF is the largest and most active public interest club of its kind of all the law schools in Southern California[40]
  • Sports Law Institute, which provides a sports law-related curriculum and annual symposia[41]

Study-abroad programs

Notable faculty

Dean

Current faculty

  • Ellen P. Aprill, a tax law scholar and part of Loyola's LL.M. program in taxation. Former U.S. Supreme Court clerk. [47]
  • William D. Araiza, a constitutional law scholar and author. Former U.S. Supreme Court clerk. [48].
  • Jeffery Atik, an international law scholar
  • Stanley A. Goldman, a criminal law professor who often doubles as a Fox News legal analyst
  • Richard L. Hasen, an election law scholar and the writer of a widely read election law blog[[49]
  • Allan Ides, a Constitutional Law Scholar. Former U.S. Supreme Court clerk. [50]
  • Robin B. Kar, a scholar on legal theory and jurisprudence
  • Laurie L. Levenson, a criminal law professor who is also a frequent contributor to CNN and other media sources. Former assistant division chief of the USAO, Central District of CA. [51]
  • Christopher N. May, who has authored many widely read books on civil procedure and constitutional law
  • Theodore P. Seto, a tax law scholar and part of Loyola's LL.M. program in taxation
  • Peter M. Tiersma, a linguist whose scholarship covers language and the law
  • Georgene M. Vairo, a widely read civil procedure scholar, perhaps best known for commentary on complex civil litigation and Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
  • Gary C. Williams, who also serves as President of the Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Southern California
  • Full faculty list and profiles

Clinical faculty

Former faculty

Notable alumni

Lawyers and activists

Non-legal

Political

Judicial

Academia

External links