DePaul University College of Law
DePaul University College of Law | |
---|---|
Parent school | DePaul University |
Religious affiliation | Catholic |
Established | 1912 (formed by merger with the Illinois College of Law, 1897) |
School type | Private law school |
Dean | Julie D. Lawton |
Location | Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Enrollment | 2022 JD enrollment (533) |
Faculty | 137 (36 full-time; 101 part-time) |
USNWR ranking | 134th (tie) (2024)[1] |
Website | law.depaul.edu |
DePaul University College of Law is the law school of DePaul University, a private Catholic research university in Chicago, Illinois. It employs more than 125 full- and part-time faculty members and enrolls more than 500 students in its Juris Doctor program. The school is recognized for its health law and intellectual property law programs, its experiential learning opportunities, and for its multiple joint degree programs offered in conjunction with other DePaul University colleges and schools.
The law school's facilities—encompassing nine floors across two buildings on the DePaul University Loop Campus—include the Vincent G. Rinn Law Library, Leonard M. Ring Courtroom, technology-enabled classrooms, two student lounges, and student offices and meeting spaces. The law school is located within two blocks of state and federal courts and is close to numerous law firms, corporations and government agencies.
History
[edit]DePaul College of Law started in 1897 as Illinois College of Law, founded by Howard N. Ogden.[2] It was the only law school not on the East Coast to offer both day and evening classes.[3]
DePaul University acquired Illinois College of Law in 1912. This purchase benefited both institutions and saw the law school's enrollment double to approximately 400 students. Ogden stayed on as the College of Law's dean, and he became the first non-Catholic trustee of the University. Three years later, upon Ogden's death, DePaul obtained full ownership of the law school.
Originally housed at 64 East Lake Street, DePaul Law moved to its current home in the Lewis Center at 25 East Jackson Boulevard in 1958. Formerly known as the Kimball Building, it was gifted to DePaul in 1955 by the Frank J. Lewis Foundation. At that time, it was the largest gift received by the University.[4]
In 1972, DePaul purchased the Finchley Building next door and later renamed it Comerford J. O'Malley Place (commonly known as "O'Malley Place") in honor of the former president and chancellor of DePaul. Also that year, DePaul Law opened its first legal clinic in the United States.[5]
Statistics
[edit]Student body
[edit]For the 2023 entering class, DePaul Law had 150 full-time students and 27 part-time students with a median LSAT of 156. Ages for all students ranged from 20-38 with a median age of 24 for full-time students and 28 for part-time students.[6]
Programs and Degrees
[edit]- 12 Juris Doctor (JD] certificate programs: Art & Museum Law; Business Law; Criminal Law; Family Law; Health Law; Health Care Compliance; Information Technology, Cybersecurity & Data Privacy Law; Intellectual Property; International and Comparative Law; Patent Law; Public Interest Law; and Taxation
- 11 joint degree programs: BA/JD (3+3 program with the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences and College of Communication); JD/Master of Arts in International Studies; JD/Master in International & European Business Law; JD/Master of Business Administration; JD/Master of Science in Computer Science; JD/Master of Science in Public Service Management; JD/LLM in Health Law, Intellectual Property Law, International Law, or Taxation; JD/Nonprofit Management; JD/Master of Public Administration; JD/Master of Public Policy; JD/Master of Science in International Public Service
- Six Master of Legal Studies (MLS) concentrations: Business Law; Criminal Law; Data Privacy and Cybersecurity Law; General Legal Studies; Health Care Compliance; Health Law; International & Comparative Law; Public Interest Law
- Four Master of Law (LLM) degrees: Health Law; Intellectual Property Law; International Law; and U.S. Legal Studies
DePaul Law's six Programs of Excellence allow students to focus their education around the following legal practice areas: Business Law & Tax Law, Family Law, Health Law, Immigration Law & Human Rights Law, Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology, and Public Interest Law & Public Service. Most of these programs are supported by the law school's institutes and initiatives.
Experiential Learning
[edit]Legal Clinics
[edit]DePaul Law's legal clinics allow students to assist clients who are facing real legal issues. Available to second- and third-year students, the law school offers seven in-house and field clinics.
- Asylum & Immigration Law
- Business Law
- Civil Litigation & Health Law
- Criminal Appeals
- Croak Community Legal Clinic
- Family Law
- Technology/Intellectual Property
Student Opportunities
[edit]Journals
[edit]DePaul Law publishes five academic journals:
- DePaul Law Review
- DePaul Business and Commercial Law Journal
- DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law
- DePaul Journal of Health Care Law
- DePaul Journal for Social Justice
Moot Court Society and National Trial Team
[edit]DePaul Law's Moot Court Society and National Trial Team enable students to participate in competitions across the country. In 2022, the National Trial Team was named Regional Champions[7] at the American Association for Justice's Student Trial Advocacy Competition, and they placed fifth at Nationals. Also that year, the Moot Court team won second place overall at the Chicago Bar Association's Moot Court Competition,[8] and its students received Best Oralist and Second Best Oralist awards.
DePaul Law also sponsors the Honorable William J. Bauer Moot Court Competition, an annual intramural appellate competition in which student teams analyze and brief a hypothetical appellate problem and argue the case before practicing attorneys and judges.
Notable alumni
[edit]The following are some of DePaul Law's notable alumni.
- Honorable William J. Bauer, Senior Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
- Albert E. Bennett, Illinois State Senator
- Michael A. Bilandic, former mayor of Chicago; Chief Justice, Illinois Supreme Court
- Robert A. Clifford, prominent Chicago trial attorney
- Richard J. Daley, former mayor of Chicago
- Richard M. Daley, former mayor of Chicago
- Kirk Dillard, Chairman, Regional Transportation Authority; former Illinois State Senator
- Honorable Thomas Durkin, U.S. District Judge, Northern District of Illinois
- Chaz Ebert, CEO and publisher of Ebert Digital, which runs RogerEbert.com
- Bernard Epton, Illinois State Representative and Chicago mayoral candidate
- Jack M. Greenberg, former chairman and CEO of McDonald's Corporation
- Benjamin L. Hooks, American civil rights leader, executive director of the NAACP (1977 to 1992)
- Gerald D. Hosier, Intellectual Property Attorney and Patent Litigator
- Perry Wilbon Howard, attorney and Republican civil rights activist from Mississippi
- Augustus Sol Invictus, white nationalist and speaker at the Unite the Right rally
- Honorable Lee M. Jackwig, United States Bankruptcy Judge, Southern District of Iowa
- Michael Jaharis, founder of Kos Pharmaceuticals and Vatera Healthcare Partners LLC, and co-founder of Arisaph Pharmaceuticals
- Sidney Korshak (1908–1996), an attorney best known as a liaison between the Chicago Outfit crime syndicate and corporate Hollywood.[9] He was widely considered to be a power broker in Hollywood and was reportedly one of the inspirations for Robert Duvall's character in The Godfather.[10]
- J. Elmer Lehr, former Wisconsin State Senator
- James Lyons, prominent Denver attorney and former Federal Judicial Nominee, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
- Erica MacDonald, United States Attorney for the District of Minnesota
- Andrew J. McKenna, chairman emeritus of McDonald's Corporation
- Richard A. Napolitano, Illinois State Representative
- Natalye Paquin, Chief Operating Officer, The Rockefeller Foundation
- Harry Nicholas Pritzker, entrepreneur and philanthropist, patriarch of the Pritzker Family
- George Remus, notorious Chicago criminal defense attorney and, later, bootlegger in Cincinnati, Ohio, known as the "King of the Bootleggers", was an Illinois College of Law graduate.
- Dennis Shere, author
- John Stroger, former president, Cook County Board of Commissioners; namesake of Stroger Hospital
- Samuel Skinner, former U.S. federal prosecutor for the Northern District of Illinois and U.S. Treasury Secretary and Chief of Staff under President George H.W. Bush
- Juliana Stratton, Lieutenant Governor of Illinois
- Charles E. Tucker, Jr., retired U.S. Air Force major general and executive director of the World Engagement Institute (WEInstitute)
- Honorable Franklin Valderrama, U.S. District Judge, Northern District of Illinois
- Jody Weiner, novelist, non-fiction author, film producer and lawyer
Notable faculty
[edit]Current
[edit]- Roberta Kwall is the Raymond P. Niro Professor at DePaul Law; the founder of the Center for Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology at DePaul Law; and the author of several books, including Remix Judaism: Preserving Tradition in a Diverse World (2020) and The Soul of Creativity (2010).
Former
[edit]- Susan Bandes is emeritus centennial distinguished professor of law at DePaul and author of The Passions of Law (2000). She is one of the most widely cited professors in criminal law and procedure and is one of the founders of the field of Law and Emotion.
- M. Cherif Bassiouni was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 1999 for his work on behalf of the International Criminal Court. In 2007, he was awarded the Hague Prize for International Law for his "distinguished contribution in the field of international law". He served as the president of DePaul's International Human Rights Law Institute.
- Erwin Chemerinsky is currently dean of the University of California, Berkeley School of Law. At DePaul, he taught courses in administrative law, constitutional law, federal courts, and law and the mass media.
- Clarence Darrow, a criminal defense attorney known for the Scopes Trial and the Leopold and Loeb case, among others, was an early adjunct professor at DePaul Law.
- James Fleissner served as deputy to Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald in the Justice Department investigation into allegations that one or more government officials illegally disclosed the identity of a CIA agent.
References
[edit]- ^ "Best Law Schools – DePaul University". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
- ^ "History | About | College of Law | DePaul University, Chicago".
- ^ "DePaul University Library". www.lib.depaul.edu. Archived from the original on 2008-08-28. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
- ^ "DePaul University Library". www.lib.depaul.edu. Archived from the original on 2008-08-28. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
- ^ "DePaul University Library". www.lib.depaul.edu. Archived from the original on 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
- ^ "Enrollment Statistics | JD Admission | Admission & Aid | College of Law | DePaul University, Chicago". law.depaul.edu.
- ^ "News | About | College of Law | DePaul University, Chicago".
- ^ "Moot Court Competition Results".
- ^ "The Korshak Chronicles". www.richsamuels.com. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
- ^ "Seattle News and Events | News". Seattle Weekly. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-06-09.