University of Pittsburgh School of Law

Last updated
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Barco Law Building, University of Pittsburgh.jpg
Parent school University of Pittsburgh
Established1895
School type Public law school
Dean Mary Crossley (Interim)
Location Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
40°26′31″N79°57′21″W / 40.441885°N 79.955707°W / 40.441885; -79.955707
Enrollment400
Faculty86 full-time faculty
USNWR ranking91st (tie) (2024) [1]
Website www.law.pitt.edu

The University of Pittsburgh School of Law (Pitt Law) is the law school of the University of Pittsburgh, a public research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1895 and became a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools in 1900. Its primary home facility is the Barco Law Building. The school offers four degrees: Master of Studies in Law, Juris Doctor, Master of Laws for international students, and the Doctor of Juridical Science. The school offers several international legal programs, operates a variety of clinics, and publishes several law journals.

Contents

According to University of Pittsburgh School of Law's 2021 ABA-required disclosures, 87% of graduates were employed ten months after graduation with 65% attaining positions where bar admission is required. [2]

History

Home of law school from 1897 to 1919 Pitt1854to1882.jpg
Home of law school from 1897 to 1919
The Cathedral of Learning housed the law school from 1936 to 1976 UpittCOL.JPG
The Cathedral of Learning housed the law school from 1936 to 1976

The law department was founded in 1843 and is one of 17 schools constituting the University of Pittsburgh. [3] [4] The first four law degrees were conferred in 1847. [4] Classes were held in a stone building at Third Street until the building was destroyed in the fire of 1845 and were then held in the university's building on Duquesne Way until that building was burned in 1849. Classes were continued after the second fire in the basement of the Third Presbyterian Church until the universities first law professor, Walter H. Lowrie, was elected to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in 1851 and forced him to abandon his teaching at the school. [4] This, along with the fires that destroyed many of the university's facilities and resources, disrupted the development of the School of Law.

Although various attempts were made to reestablish law instruction beginning in 1862, a permanent law school was not established until 1895. The university at that time was named the Western University of Pennsylvania, but despite this, the law school was originally named the Pittsburgh Law School, a name it held until 1918. [4] The Pittsburgh Law School became a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools in 1900.

The first classes in the permanently established school were conducted in the orphans' court rooms in the old Allegheny County courthouse. In 1897, the school moved into the old university building at Ross and Diamond streets that had been sold to the county in 1882. The school moved again in 1919-20 to the tenth floor of the Chamber of Commerce building. [4] In 1936 the School of Law moved in its entirety to the 14-16 floors of the Cathedral of Learning on the main campus of the university located in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh. [4]

During the 1950s and 1960s, the School of Law's Health Law Center was an early pioneer in the field now known as computer-assisted legal research (CALR). Attorney and researcher John Horty was astounded by the extent to which the laws governing hospital administration varied from one state to the next across the United States, and began building a computer database to help him keep track of it all. News of Horty's pioneering work at Pitt inspired the Ohio State Bar Association (just across the state line in nearby Ohio) to create its own separate CALR system, the ancestor of the database system known today as LexisNexis. [5] [6] The School of Law moved into their own dedicated facility, the Barco Law Building, upon its opening on the university's main campus in 1976. [7]

Deans

Facilities

Academics

The University of Pittsburgh School of Law offers four degrees. The J.D. (Juris Doctor) is the required degree to practice law in most of the United States, thus J.D. students make up most of the school's student body.

Academic programs

View of the bench and jury box from the gallery area of the Teplitz Memorial Moot Courtroom TeplitzMootCourtroominBarcoLawBuilding.jpg
View of the bench and jury box from the gallery area of the Teplitz Memorial Moot Courtroom

Pitt Law offers area studies in the following international legal systems:

These area studies serve to supplement the study of International Law, in addition to providing Pitt Law students with the opportunity to pursue careers abroad.

Experiential skills programs

Clinics

The University of Pittsburgh School of Law has several clinical programs, which allow law students to gain practical experience as lawyers before graduating from law school. [8] The following clinics are currently offered by the School of Law:

  • Tax Clinic
  • Securities Arbitration Clinic
  • Family Law Clinic
  • Environmental Law Clinic
  • Health Law Clinic
  • Elder Law Clinic
  • Immigration Law Clinic

Lawyering Skills Competitions

The law school also hosts and facilitates multiple moot court and lawyering skills competitions for law students. The law school's Moot Court Board administers three intramural competitions each year: the Appellate Moot Court Competition, the Murray S. Love Trial Moot Court Competition, and the Negotiations Competition. The school also assembles teams to compete at multiple interscholastic and international moot court competitions covering specialized areas such as Energy Law, Environmental Law, Health Law, International Arbitration and International Law, Workers' Compensation Law, Client Counseling, and Intellectual Property. The school's Mock Trial Program recruits adjunct coaches from the local practicing bar to assemble law student teams to participate in mock trial competitions throughout the country. In 2014-2015, more than 20% of second- and third-year students participated in an interscholastic competition. [9]

Semester in D.C. Program

The law school's Semester in D.C. Program allows spring semester second- and third-year students to pursue a full-time externship for an employer in Washington, D.C. [10] The Semester in D.C. combines full-time work for academic credit with a small seminar class held at the law school's dedicated Washington Center to fulfill a full semester credit load. Students can also pursue a Public Policy Concentration, taking additional courses to learn to apply legal advocacy, research, and writing skills in the policy context.

Publications

Journals

Barco Law Library BarcoEntrance4.jpg
Barco Law Library

Pitt Law is home to two law reviews and several student-edited legal journals, including the Pittsburgh Law Review, which is one of the 40 most-cited law reviews in the country, according to Chicago-Kent Law Review's 1996 Faculty Scholarship Survey. [11] The following law reviews are all publications of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law:

The following journals are all publications of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law:

JURIST

JURIST is the world's only law school-based comprehensive legal news and research service. Its professionally trained staff of law faculty and law students report and research the latest legal developments in real time for members of the legal community and the public at large. JURIST covers legal news stories based on their substantive importance rather than on their mass-market or commercial appeal.

Applicant Information

Admissions

Admissions to the University of Pittsburgh School of Law are conducted on a rolling basis, with an acceptance rate of slightly less than 30%. For the entering class of 2019, the median LSAT score was 158, and the median GPA was 3.49. [12] There were 120 entering students.

Admissions Statistics for the University of Pittsburgh School of Law [13]

YearEnrolledApplicationsLSAT - MedianGPA - MedianLSAT - 25thLSAT - 75thGPA - 25thGPA - 75th
20191201,1961583.491551603.223.71
20181301,8321573.391541593.093.60
20171411,7131563.421521583.113.62
20161401,3411563.421521593.123.64
20151341,4011563.361531593.033.63
20141561,1721573.461521603.093.68
20131741,4871583.421541613.163.61
20122101,9731583.341551603.093.60

Costs and financial aid

The estimated cost of attendance (includes tuition, fees, books, and living expenses) at Pitt Law for the 2014-15 academic year is $50,008 for a Pennsylvania resident and $57,492 for a non-resident. [14] The average law school debt for the graduating Class of 2012 was $94,879, well below the national average. [15] Pitt Law was one of only 53 law schools out of over 200 nationally (and one of only three in Pennsylvania) to be ranked as a 2014 Best Value by The National Jurist. The survey took into account multiple factors, with success in job placement weighted most heavily at 35%, followed by tuition (25%), average indebtedness (15%), bar passage rates (15%), and cost of living (10%). [16]

Employment

ABA Employment Summary for 2020 Graduates [17]
Employment StatusPercentage
Employed - Bar Passage Required
75%
Employed - J.D. Advantage
14.2%
Employed - Professional
2.5%
Employed - Non-Professional
1.7%
Unemployed - Seeking
2.5%
Other
4.1%
Total of 120 Graduates
ABA Employment for 2020 Graduates by Sector [17]
Employment SectorPercentage
Law Firms - 101+ Attorneys
28.3%
Law Firms - <101 Attorneys
31.9%
Law Firms - Solo
0%
Business and Industry
12.4%
Clerkships - Federal
1.8%
Clerkships - State/Local
3.5%
Government/Public Interest
22.1%
Education/Other
3.5%
Total of 113 Employed Graduates

Rankings

Notable alumni

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References

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  2. "2016 Employment Summary Data" (PDF).
  3. Fleming, George Thornton (December 21, 1922). "History of Pittsburgh and Environs: From Prehistoric Days to the Beginning of the American Revolution". American historical society, Incorporated via Google Books.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Starrett, Agnes Lynch (1937). Through One Hundred and Fifty Years: The University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press. Archived from the original on September 19, 2024. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
  5. Hershey, Tina Batra; Burke, Donald (February 2018). "Pioneers in Computerized Legal Research: The Story of the Pittsburgh System". Pittsburgh Journal of Technology Law and Policy. 18. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press: 29–39. doi: 10.5195/tlp.2018.212 . ISSN   2164-800X.
  6. Bourne, Charles P.; Hahn, Trudi Bellardo (2003). A History of Online Information Services, 1963-1976 . Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. pp.  229–230. ISBN   978-0-262-02538-6. Available through IEEE Xplore.
  7. digital.library.pitt.edu http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=pittmiscpubs;cc=pittmiscpubs;g=documentingpitt;xc=1;xg=1;q1=law+building;rgn=full+text;idno=00c50130m;didno=00c50130m;view=image;seq=0426.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[ permanent dead link ]
  8. "Clinics". University of Pittsburgh School of Law. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  9. "University of Pittsburgh - 2015 Standard 509 Information Report" (PDF). www.law.pitt.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-08-15. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  10. "Semester in D.C. Program". University of Pittsburgh School of Law. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
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  12. "JD Admissions Process | School of Law | University of Pittsburgh". www.law.pitt.edu.
  13. "Standard 509 Disclosure". www.abarequireddisclosures.org.
  14. "Cost of Attendance". Cost. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  15. "Comparison of Educational Debt". Comparison of Educational Debt. Archived from the original on 13 February 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  16. "The Best Value Law Schools of 2014". Above the Law. 17 June 2014.
  17. 1 2 "ABA Employment Summary for 2020 Graduates" (PDF). www.law.pitt.edu.