California Western School of Law
California Western School of Law, founded in 1924, is a private, nonprofit law school located in San Diego, California. It is popularly known as California Western or Cal Western and formerly California Western University. The school was approved by the American Bar Association in 1962 and became a member of the Association of American Law Schools in 1967. California Western School of Law is the oldest law school in San Diego.
History
California Western was originally chartered in 1924 by Leland Ghent Stanford as a private graduate institution called Balboa Law College, the first law school in San Diego. His brother, Dwight Stanford, served as one of the first deans. Balboa Law College expanded to include undergraduate and other graduate studies and changed its name to Balboa University. The law school at Balboa University was closed in 1946.In 1952, Balboa University became affiliated with the Southern California Methodist Conference, changed its name to California Western University, and relocated to Point Loma. The law school was reopened in downtown. In 1960, the law school had six full-time faculty and 23 students. In that year, it relocated to Rohr Hall at Point Loma. It received approval from the American Bar Association in 1962.
In 1968, California Western University changed its name to United States International University. The law school retained the name California Western, while USIU moved to Scripps Ranch. Point Loma Nazarene University currently occupies the Point Loma site. In 2001, USIU merged with California School of Professional Psychology to become Alliant International University.
In 1973, the law school relocated from its Point Loma location to the current downtown campus at 350 Cedar Street. In 1975, California Western ended its affiliation with USIU and became an independent secular law school. In 1980, the new trimester system was announced, allowing two entering classes per academic year, reducing individual class size and allowing students the opportunity to graduate in two years rather than the standard three.
In 1993, the law school opened a new administrative and campus center at 225 Cedar Street, housing faculty and administration offices, including: student services, admissions, and financial aid.
In January 2000, California Western opened a new law library building at 290 Cedar Street, which was dedicated by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. The current dean, Niels B. Schaumann, joined the law school in 2012.
Rankings
In December 2012, National Jurist magazine ranked California Western among the top 40 law schools in the nation for diversity. At number 35, California Western was the highest-ranking law school in San Diego for student and faculty diversity; 58 percent of entering students were women.California Western was ranked within the top ten law schools for diversity in U.S. News & World Report’s 2019 Law School Diversity Index.
In 2019, the College Gazette honored California Western by ranking it number six in its ranking of the "Most Incredible Law Schools Outside the Ivy League." The College Gazette recognized CWSL's highly acclaimed STEPPS program as a client-attorney simulation course where students experience what it really takes to establish an ethical and successful practice in various fields of law. The College Gazette also recognized CWSL's Clinical Externship Program; "In this unique program, students are afforded the opportunity to work for law firms, public offices, or other arenas. This provides exceptionally valuable real-world experience prior to actually joining the ranks of professional law."
USWNR ranked the school 10th for Diversity and 53rd for "Best Law Schools, Part-time Law";
Academics
The law school teaches the J.D. curriculum plus dual-degree programs, specifically:- J.D./Master of Business Administration
- J.D./Master of Social Work
Programs and research centers
Research centers include:- The California Innocence Project, part of the national network of innocence projects, is a nonprofit clinical program based at California Western in which law professors and students work to free wrongly convicted prisoners in California. The law students assist in the investigation of cases where there is strong evidence of innocence, write briefs in those cases, and advocate in all appropriate forums for the release of the project's clients. Founded in 1999, the California Innocence Project reviews more than 2,000 claims of innocence from California inmates each year. The project was founded by Professors Justin Brooks and Jan Stiglitz and is currently directed by Prof. Brooks.
- William J. McGill Center for Creative Problem Solving
- Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy
- National Center for Preventive Law
Its Clinical Internship Program routinely places students in the U.S. Court of Appeals, U.S. District Court, and U.S. Attorney's Offices, as well as numerous law firms in various sizes.
Faculty
The law school has 25 tenured faculty members, three faculty members on the tenure track and six legal skills professors. From 2010 to 2014, 28 tenured and tenure-track faculty members published 18 books, 15 book chapters, 55 law review articles and 75 other scholarly publications. Tenure-track or tenured faculty who were members of the faculty in the last seven years wrote 70 additional publications.In 2013, the law school joined with Bepress to create its Scholarly Commons, an institutional repository for faculty scholarship. The repository was created to make faculty scholarship more widely available, especially on the internet, and to preserve the faculty's scholarship, publications, documents, and records in a systematic way.
The law school created six endowed professorships to support faculty members in their research and scholarship and to recognize their leadership in legal education and the legal profession, nationally and internationally. California Western has also been named to the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll for the past five years.
Faculty members have created programs such as the Pro Bono Honors Society, Community Law Project, and Access to Law Initiative that organize and support students and recent graduates in providing legal services to underserved segments of the San Diego community.
Bar passage rates
The California Western bar passage rate for June 2017 was 65%, versus 70% for the California statewide average of ABA-accredited schools. California Western met or surpassed the statewide bar pass rate on 14 of the last 17 state bar examinations.Costs
The total annual cost of full-time attendance at California Western School of Law for the 2018-2019 academic year is $77,360 for the JD program. For the LLM Comparative Law program, total costs in 2018-2019 total $53,596. The median yearly grant for the 2016-2017 academic year was $21,500 for full-time students, with 92% of students receiving grants. 48% of students had grants covering more than half of tuition.Employment
According to California Western's official 2017 ABA-required disclosures, 53.8 percent of the graduating class of 2017 obtained full-time, long-term, J.D.-required employment nine months after graduation, excluding solo practitioners.Student debt
According to U.S. News & World Report, the average indebtedness of 2016 graduates who incurred law school debt was $143,592, and 88% of 2016 graduates took on debt.California Western has been recognized in LendEDU's annual report on student loan default rates for having one of the lowest default rates of all of the law schools within the entire country. Specifically, the default rate at California Western was 0.70 percent according to the most recent data from the Department of Education as of December, 2019.
Areas of concentration
California Western's areas of concentration provide education in the following areas:- Child, family, and elder law
- Creative problem solving
- Criminal justice
- Health law and policy
- Intellectual property and technology regulation
- International law
- Labor and employment law
- Business law
Publications
Notable faculty
- Justin Brooks, criminal defense attorney and director of the California Innocence Project
- Ricardo Garcia, the 11th Public Defender for Los Angeles County
Notable alumni
- Anthony J. Battaglia, U.S. District Court judge for the Southern District of California
- Scott C. Black, former Judge Advocate General of the United States Army
- Bruce Blakeman first Presiding Officer of Nassau County NY and Commissioner of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
- Shana Dale, former deputy administrator of NASA
- David Francis, former member of the United States Cycling Team
- James B. Gibson, former mayor of Henderson, Nevada
- M. James Lorenz, U.S. District Court judge for the Southern District of California
- Bruce E. MacDonald, former U.S. Navy vice admiral and Judge Advocate General of the Navy
- Thomas Nassif, former United States Ambassador to the Kingdom of Morocco
- Afa Ripley, Jr., Attorney General of American Samoa
- Margaret Catharine Rodgers, United States federal judge
- David Roger, District Attorney of Clark County, Nevada
- Kevin Sandkuhler, retired Brigadier General in the United States Marine Corps
- Charles Jay Tinlin, County Court Judge and Canvassing Board Chair, St. Johns County, Florida
- Michael Tsai, former Minister of National Defense, Taiwan.
- Brian Maienschein - Member of the California State Assembly