Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2003

Rights

In Copyright

Abstract

Using Yale Law School as an example, this Article describes the interaction between university-affiliated law schools and the larger university during a crucial period in the development of legal education: the last third of the nineteenth century. At the same time, the Article contrasts Yale with other law schools of the day to show what made Yale unique and how Yale’s nineteenth-century idiosyncrasies would come to shape legal education at other schools in the twentieth century. Part I examines the university administration’s attitude toward the law school and how it typified law school-university relations in the late nineteenth century. Part II assesses the educational philosophies of the law school faculty, comparing and contrasting their views on legal education and professionalization with those of other law teachers of the time. Understanding this period in Yale’s development provides insights into law school-university relations and the prevailing justification for university-affiliated legal education after the Civil War.

Publication Title

Journal of Legal Education

First Page

368

Last Page

403

Comments

Journal of Legal Education © 2003 The Association of Americal Law Schools.

Required Text

Article © 2003 Mark Bartholomew. Originally published in volume 53 of the Journal of Legal Education, © 2003 The Association of American Law Schools.

Share

COinS