University of Wisconsin Law School
The University of Wisconsin Law School is the professional school for the study of law at the University of Wisconsin–Madison located in Madison, Wisconsin, in the United States.
Motto | Law in Action |
---|---|
Type | State university |
Established | 1868 |
Dean | Daniel Tokaji |
Academic staff | 121[1] |
Students | 650[1] |
Location | , , |
Website | law |
The law school was founded in 1868. The University of Wisconsin Law School is guided by a "law in action" philosophy, which emphasizes the role of the law in practice and society. Juris Doctor graduates of the law school enjoy admission to the Wisconsin bar by diploma privilege.
According to the 2021 rankings published by U.S. News and World Report, the University of Wisconsin Law School ranks 38 among 194 law schools fully accredited by the American Bar Association.
The current dean is constitutional law scholar Daniel Tokaji, who assumed the position in 2020.
Facilities
The law school is located on Bascom Hill, the center of the UW–Madison campus. In 1996, it completed a major renovation project that joined two previous buildings and created a four-story glass atrium. The renovation was recognized by the American Institute of Architects for its innovative design, incorporating modern design into the 150 years of architecture on historic Bascom Hill. In addition to lecture halls and smaller classrooms, the law school contains a fully functional trial courtroom, appellate courtroom, and an extensive law library. The library is noted for the 1942 mural "The Freeing of the Slaves" by John Steuart Curry that dominates the Quarles & Brady Reading Room (also known as the "Old Reading Room").
Legal philosophy
The University of Wisconsin Law School subscribes to a "law in action" legal philosophy. This philosophy proposes that to truly understand the law, students must not only know the "law on the books", but also study how the law is actually practiced by professionals. The law school's classroom discussions, involvement with other campus departments, scholarship, and clinical practica all emphasize the interplay between law and society.
Journals and publications
The University of Wisconsin Law School's flagship journal is the Wisconsin Law Review, which was founded in 1920[2][3] and became an entirely student-run law review in 1935.[4] Students at the law school also publish two specialty journals: the Wisconsin International Law Journal, established in 1982, and the Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society, a continuation of the Wisconsin Women's Law Journal, established in 1985. A third specialty journal, the Wisconsin Environmental Law Journal, was founded in 1994 but discontinued publication in 2002.
Clinical programs
The law school places a great emphasis on its clinical programs, as part of its law-in-action curriculum. The most well-known clinic is the Frank J. Remington Center, named after the late UW law professor Frank J. Remington. The center runs a variety of programs focused on the practice of criminal law. The largest program in the Center is the Legal Assistance to Institutionalized Persons (LAIP) Project, which provides legal services to inmates incarcerated in Wisconsin. The center also runs clinics focused on family law, criminal defense, criminal prosecution, criminal appeals, community-oriented policing, a restorative justice project, and an innocence project that attempts to reverse judgments against wrongfully convicted defendants. The law school also runs a group of clinics focusing on civil law called the Economic Justice Institute. This clinical grouping includes the Neighborhood Law Clinic, which serves underrepresented clients in landlord/tenant, workers' rights, and public benefit disputes; the Family Court Clinic; the Consumer Law Clinic; the Immigrant Justice Clinic; and the VOCA Restraining Order Clinic. The Restraining Order Clinic provides support for petitioners for a domestic abuse restraining order.[5][6] The Law and Entrepreneurship Clinic focuses on transactional law and provides assistance to start-ups and business entities. Finally, the Center for Patient Partnerships is an interdisciplinary patient advocacy clinical housed in the law school in which students of law, medicine, nursing, social work, pharmacy, public policy etc. serve as advocates for people with life-threatening illnesses as they negotiate the health care system.
Traditions
The most visible tradition at the law school is that of the Gargoyle. The Gargoyle graced the roof of the original law school building, built in 1893. When that building was torn down in 1963, the gargoyle was found intact among the rubble and was saved as an unofficial mascot. It became the symbol of the law school and was displayed outside the law school building for many years. With the most recent renovation, it moved to a more protected location inside the law school atrium. The image of the gargoyle graces the cover of the Wisconsin Law Review and the law school alumni magazine is called the Gargoyle. Its image has been applied to law school memorabilia. In addition to the Gargoyle, "Blind Bucky" is also sometimes used as an unofficial mascot of the law school.
Another tradition is the homecoming cane toss, which dates from the 1930s. Before the university's homecoming football game, third-year law students run from the north end of the football field at Camp Randall Stadium to the south end wearing bowler hats and carrying canes. When the students reach the goalpost on the south end of the field, they attempt to throw their canes over the goalpost. Legend has it that if the student successfully throws the cane over the goalpost and catches it, she will win her first case; if she fails to catch it, the opposite will hold true.
Another tradition is an annual fall competition between the law and medical schools at the university. This competition, called the Dean's Cup, raises funds for local charities.
Diploma privilege
The University of Wisconsin Law School is one of only two law schools in the United States whose graduates enjoy diploma privilege as a method of admission to the bar.[7] Unlike all other jurisdictions in the United States, Wisconsin's state bar allows graduates of accredited law schools within the state to join the bar without taking the state's bar examination if they complete certain requirements in their law school courses and achieve a certain level of performance in those courses. The other school with this privilege is the Marquette University Law School.
Wisconsin residents who graduate from out-of-state law schools must pass the bar exam to be admitted to the bar in Wisconsin. Some states, but not all, will grant reciprocal admission to Wisconsin bar members admitted by diploma privilege after they have completed a certain number of years in the practice of law.
Rankings
In its 2021 edition of Best Graduate Schools, U.S. News & World Report ranked the school 38th among the 192 law schools fully accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA).[8] According to the 2018 source of academic ranking, UW-Madison law school's graduate programs had been ranked among the world's best, which investigated most cited legal scholars on Westlaw and performance of graduates in the legal education market.[9]
Employment
According to the law school's 2019 ABA required disclosures, 77.2 percent of the Class of 2018 obtained full-time, long-term, bar passage-required employment nine months after graduation.[10]
Notable faculty
Notable alumni
- Shirley Abrahamson – former Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court[17]
- Thomas Ryum Amlie – U.S. Representative[18]
- Daniel P. Anderson – Presiding Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[19]
- Gerald K. Anderson – Wisconsin State Assemblyman[20]
- Norman C. Anderson – Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly[21]
- James N. Azim Jr. – Wisconsin State Representative[22]
- Martha Bablitch – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[23]
- William A. Bablitch – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[24]
- Tammy Baldwin – first woman to represent Wisconsin in the U.S. House of Representatives and the United States Senate[25]
- Levi H. Bancroft – Attorney General of Wisconsin, Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly[26]
- Lloyd Barbee – Wisconsin legislator and civil rights activist[27]
- Charles V. Bardeen – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[28]
- Elmer E. Barlow – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[29]
- John Barnes – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[30]
- Tom Barrett – U.S. Representative[31]
- Robert McKee Bashford – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[32]
- Peter D. Bear – Wisconsin State Senator[33]
- Bruce F. Beilfuss – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[34]
- Theodore Benfey – Wisconsin State Senator[35]
- Claire B. Bird – Wisconsin State Senator[36]
- Robyn J. Blader – U.S. National Guard general
- Daniel D. Blinka – Marquette University Law School professor[37]
- Nils Boe – 23rd Governor of South Dakota and served as a Judge for the United States Customs Court[38]
- Ann Walsh Bradley – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[39]
- Theodore W. Brazeau – Wisconsin State Senator[40]
- Susan Brnovich - Judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona[41]
- Grover L. Broadfoot – Chief Justice of Wisconsin[42]
- Angie Brooks – President, United Nations General Assembly[43]
- Richard S. Brown – Chief Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[44]
- Edward E. Browne – U.S. Representative[45]
- Andrew A. Bruce – Justice, North Dakota Supreme Court[46]
- George Bunn – Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court and Dean of William Mitchell College of Law[47]
- Michael E. Burke – U.S. Representative[48]
- Louis B. Butler – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[49]
- William G. Callow – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[50]
- Howard W. Cameron – Wisconsin State Senator[51]
- Fred J. Carpenter – Wisconsin State Representative[52]
- Milton Robert Carr – U.S. Representative from Michigan[53]
- Richard Cates – Wisconsin legislator and lawyer[54]
- Moses E. Clapp – United States Senator[55]
- David G. Classon – U.S. Representative[56]
- Clarence Clinton Coe – Wisconsin State Representative[57]
- William M. Conley – judge for the U. S. District Court, Western District of Wisconsin[58]
- Barbara Crabb – Judge, U. S. District Court, Western District of Wisconsin[59]
- Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw – professor of law at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School[60]
- Timothy T. Cronin – U.S. Attorney[61]
- Charles H. Crownhart – former Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[62]
- John Cudahy – U.S. diplomat[63]
- George R. Currie – Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court[64]
- Richard Danner – professor of law, Duke University
- Joseph E. Davies – U.S. diplomat[65]
- Glenn Robert Davis – U.S. Representative[66]
- Roland B. Day – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[67]
- John A. Decker – Chief Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[68]
- David G. Deininger – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[69]
- John M. Detling – Wisconsin State Representative[70]
- Benjamin W. Diederich – Wisconsin State Representative
- Christian Doerfler – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[71]
- W. Patrick Donlin – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals and Supreme Advocate of the Knights of Columbus[72]
- Davis A. Donnelly – Wisconsin State Senator[73]
- F. Ryan Duffy – Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals and former United States Senator[74]
- Charles P. Dykman – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[75]
- William Eich – Chief Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[76]
- Evan Alfred Evans – Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit[77]
- Thomas E. Fairchild – Senior judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit[78]
- L. J. Fellenz – Wisconsin State Senator
- Robben Wright Fleming – President, University of Michigan[79]
- Chester A. Fowler – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Harold V. Froehlich – U.S. Representative[80]
- Edward R. Garvey – labor activist and politician[81]
- Edward J. Gehl – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[82]
- Hiram Gill – Mayor of Seattle, Washington
- Rachel A. Graham - Judge, Wisconsin Court of Appeals
- Ansley Gray – Wisconsin State Representative[83]
- Mark Andrew Green – U.S. diplomat[84]
- Kenneth L. Greenquist – Wisconsin State Senator
- Stephen S. Gregory – President, American Bar Association
- Kenneth P. Grubb – judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin[85]
- David W. Hagen – judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada[86]
- Oscar Hallam – Justice, Minnesota Supreme Court
- Connor Hansen – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[87]
- Frank H. Hanson – Wisconsin State Senator and Representative[88]
- George P. Harrington – Wisconsin State Representative
- Everis A. Hayes – United States Representative[89]
- Nathan Heffernan – Chief Justice of Wisconsin[90]
- Paul B. Higginbotham – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[91]
- Knute Hill – United States Representative[92]
- Geraldine Hines – Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court[93]
- Michael W. Hoover – Presiding Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[94]
- George Hudnall – Wisconsin State Senator from the 11th District.[95]
- Paul O. Husting – U.S. Senator[96]
- Lester Johnson – U.S. Representative[97]
- Burr W. Jones – U.S. Representative[98]
- William Carey Jones – U.S. Representative[99]
- Fred F. Kaftan – Wisconsin State Senator
- John C. Karel – Wisconsin State Representative[100]
- Robert Kastenmeier – U.S. Representative[101]
- David Keene – Chairman of the American Conservative Union[102]
- Ernest Keppler – politician and jurist[103]
- Nneka Egbujiobi – lawyer and founder of Hello Africa[104]
- James C. Kerwin – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Spencer L. Kimball – dean of law, University of Wisconsin–Madison and former professor of law, University of Chicago
- Warren P. Knowles – Governor of Wisconsin[105]
- Arthur W. Kopp – U.S. Representative[106]
- Andrew L. Kreutzer – Wisconsin State Senator[107]
- James E. Krier – professor of law, University of Michigan. Also has taught at Harvard University – Oxford University – Stanford University – and UCLA[108]
- Belle Case La Follette – first woman to graduate from UW Law School (1885); women's suffrage activist; wife of Robert M. La Follette, Sr.[109]
- Philip La Follette – Governor of Wisconsin[110]
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. – Wisconsin governor, senator and Progressive Party candidate for U.S. President in 1924;[111]
- Robert Watson Landry – Wisconsin State Representative
- John E. Lange – U.S. State Department official
- John David Larson – U.S. National Guard general
- Peg Lautenschlager – Attorney General of Wisconsin
- Elmer O. Leatherwood – U.S. Representative from Utah[112]
- Stacy Leeds – Dean, University of Arkansas School of Law[113]
- Olin B. Lewis – Minnesota State politician[114]
- Judith L. Lichtman – attorney specializing in women's rights and civil rights[115]
- Claude Luse – judge, U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin[116]
- James Manahan – U.S. Representative[117]
- Daniel R. Mandelker – professor of law, Washington University in St. Louis
- Herbert H. Manson – Chairman of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin
- David W. Márquez – Attorney General of Alaska[118]
- Archie McComb – Wisconsin State Representative[119]
- Robert Bruce McCoy – U.S. National Guard Major General[120]
- Dale McKenna – Wisconsin State Senator[121]
- Arthur William McLeod – Wisconsin State Representative[122]
- Carroll Metzner – Wisconsin State Representative[123]
- Arthur O. Mockrud – Wisconsin State Representative[124]
- Thomas Morris – Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin[125]
- Elmer A. Morse – U.S. Representative[126]
- John E. Murray Jr. – Chancellor and professor of law at Duquesne University
- Louis Wescott Myers – Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court[127]
- Gaylord Nelson – Governor of Wisconsin – U.S. Senator and founder of Earth Day[128]
- John M. Nelson – U.S. Representative[129]
- Ivan A. Nestingen – Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin
- Mark Nordenberg – Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh[130]
- Kenneth J. O'Connell – Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court[131]
- Tawia Modibo Ocran – Justice of the Supreme Court of Ghana
- John Oestreicher – Wisconsin State Representative[132]
- Patrick H. O'Rourk, Wisconsin State Senator[133]
- Walter C. Owen – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[134]
- Juan Perez – mayor of Sheboygan, Wisconsin
- Charles B. Perry – Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
- Gregory A. Peterson – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[135]
- Richard F. Pettigrew – United States Senator[136]
- Vel Phillips – Wisconsin Secretary of State[137]
- William Edmunds Plummer – Wisconsin State RepresentativeUnited States Senate[138]
- David Prosser Jr. – Wisconsin Supreme Court justice[139]
- Rudolph T. Randa – federal judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin[140]
- Clifford E. Randall – U.S. Representative[141]
- Henry R. Rathbone – U.S. Representative[142]
- James Ward Rector – Wisconsin Supreme Court justice[143]
- Lowell A. Reed – federal judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania[144]
- Alfred S. Regnery – American conservative lawyer, author and former publisher[145]
- Michael Reilly – U.S. Representative[146]
- Paul F. Reilly – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[147]
- Paul Samuel Reinsch – U.S. diplomat
- Frank J. Remington – professor of law, University of Wisconsin–Madison
- John W. Reynolds – Governor of Wisconsin[148]
- Lori Ringhand – Interim Director of Dean Rusk International Law Center & J. Alton Hosch Professor of Law, University of Georgia School of Law[149]
- Alan S. Robertson – Wisconsin State Representative[150]
- Patience D. Roggensack – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[151]
- Ediberto Roman – professor of law at Florida International University College of Law
- John Rowe – CEO of Exelon[152]
- Arthur L. Sanborn – judge, U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin[153]
- Harry Sauthoff – U.S. Representative[154]
- Rudolph Schlabach – Wisconsin legislator and lawyer
- Henry O. Schowalter – Wisconsin State Representative[155]
- Charles B. Schudson – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[156]
- Edgar W. Schwellenbach – Chief Justice of the Washington Supreme Court[157]
- James Sensenbrenner – U.S. Representative and former Chair of the House Judiciary Committee[158]
- Robert G. Siebecker – Chief Justice of Wisconsin[159]
- David Sturtevant Ruder – Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and former dean of law, Northwestern University[160]
- Albert Morris Sames – judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona[161]
- Burton A. Scott – Chief Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[162]
- Stewart Simonson – Assistant Secretary of Public Health Emergency Preparedness
- Roy C. Smelker – Wisconsin State Representative[163]
- Edward H. Sprague – Wisconsin State Representative[164]
- Paul Soglin – Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin
- Donald W. Steinmetz – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[165]
- E. Ray Stevens – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[166]
- James A. Tawney – U.S. Representative[167]
- Howard Teasdale – Wisconsin State Senator
- Donald Edgar Tewes – U.S. Representative from Wisconsin[168]
- William Te Winkle – Wisconsin State Senator[169]
- Lewis D. Thill – U.S. Representative[170]
- Carl W. Thompson – Wisconsin State Senator[171]
- Tommy Thompson – Governor of Wisconsin and U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services[172]
- Vernon W. Thomson – Governor of Wisconsin[173]
- Eugene A. Toepel – legislator and jurist
- Phillip James Tuczynski – Wisconsin State Representative[174]
- Fran Ulmer – Lieutenant Governor of Alaska
- J.B. Van Hollen – Attorney General of Wisconsin
- Margaret J. Vergeront – Judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals[175]
- Aad J. Vinje – Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court[176]
- Edward Voigt – U.S. Representative[177]
- Michael J. Wallrich – Wisconsin State Representative[178]
- Thomas J. Walsh – U.S. Senator from Montana[179]
- Kenneth S. White – Wisconsin State Senator
- John D. Wickhem – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[180]
- Jon P. Wilcox – Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court[181]
- Alexander Wiley – U.S. Senator[182]
- John B. Winslow – Chief Justice of Wisconsin[183]
- Elmer Winter (1912–2009), founder of Manpower Inc.[184]
- Herman C. Wipperman (1853–1939), Wisconsin State Representative, 1895–1907[185]
- Richard J. Zaborski – Wisconsin State Senator[186]
- Hilbert Philip Zarky – noted attorney
- Norma Zarky noted attorney
- Nicholas S. Zeppos – Chancellor of Vanderbilt University[187]
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