Lewis & Clark Law School
The Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College, is an American Bar Association-approved private law school in Portland, Oregon.
The law school received ABA approval in 1970 and joined the Association of American Law Schools in 1973.
Lewis & Clark Law School offers the Juris Doctor degree, including a range of scholastic concentrations and legal certificate programs, as well as a Master of Laws degree in environmental, natural resources, and energy law and an LLM degree in animal law].
Each class in the three-year J.D. program has approximately 180 students. The dean of Lewis & Clark Law School is Jennifer J. Johnson, Erskine Wood Sr. endowed Professor of Law, a securities law scholar and arbitration expert, as well as a member of the American Law Institute.
Lewis & Clark law students can complete their degrees on full-time or part-time schedules, take courses during the day or evening, and focus in a number of legal specialties. The institution has a general law review and a range of specialty programs, including environmental law, public interest law, and the lawyering program. According to Lewis & Clark's official 2018 ABA-required disclosures, 75.8% of the Class of 2018 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required or JD-preferred employment nine months after graduation.
Campus grounds
The law school grounds are adjacent to a forested natural area, replete with 14-miles of biking and jogging trails in Tryon Creek State Park. The Law School is 4-miles from downtown, in the Southern hills of Portland, west of the Willamette River, at the base of the undergraduate campus of Lewis & Clark College.The Lewis & Clark College undergraduate, graduate school, and law campus grounds collectively occupy 137 acres, centered on the M. Lloyd Frank Estate on Palatine Hill in the Collins View neighborhood of Southwest Portland.
History
Lewis & Clark Law School's origins began with the University of Oregon establishing a Department of Law in Portland in 1885. After the Oregon State Legislature moved the program to Eugene, Oregon in 1915, several law faculty members resisted the move, and formed the Northwestern College of Law.In 1965, the faculty and overseers of Northwestern College of Law joined with the president and trustees of Lewis & Clark College to incorporate the Northwestern School of Law of Lewis & Clark College. Harold G. Wren was Dean of the law school from 1969-72.
Today the college has over 100 faculty and staff. Faculty members regularly appear as experts in legal proceedings, publish legal texts and contribute primary research findings to legal scholarship around the country.
Law library
The Paul L. Boley Law Library is the largest law library in Oregon and the second-largest in the Pacific Northwest with a collection of over 505,000 volumes as of 2014. Boley is also home to clinical space and program offices.Rankings
The 2020 U.S. News & World Report ranked the school at 93 as a Tier 1 institution. Individual programs continue to receive high marks at Lewis & Clark. In 2019, Lewis & Clark Law School ranked second of environmental law programs in the United States, according to U.S. News & World Report's rating system.Meanwhile, the Lewis & Clark Part-Time Program was ranked 7th in the country as of 2015.
Law centers and institutes
- Center for Animal Law Studies
- Earthrise Law Center
- Green Energy Institute
- National Crime Victim Law Institute
- Natural Resources Law Institute
- Northwest Environmental Defense Center
- Western Resources Legal Center
- International Environmental Law Project
Journals
- Environmental Law Review
- Animal Law Review
- Lewis & Clark Law Review
Practical skills
National moot court competitions
Lewis & Clark law students benefit from the campus serving as a destination for several national moot courts. In 2013, Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts launched Lewis & Clark's Environmental Moot Court Competition, presiding as a guest judge.The campus also serves as the permanent host of the National Native American Law Students Association Moot Court Competition and the International Law Students Association Pacific Regional Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. Additionally, the ILSA Student Initiated Lecture Series at Lewis & Clark has been internationally recognized for academic excellence.
Semester abroad opportunities
In addition, the law school has developed a number of exclusive global summer externship placements. There are options in India for students interested in business, litigation, transactional, public interest, human rights, and environmental practice through placement with firms and NGOs in Delhi, Hyderabad, and Mumbai.The law school has also secured exclusive placements in Asia, for students interested in international law firm experience. Past placements include firms in both Beijing and Shanghai, China.
Employment
According to Lewis & Clark's official 2018 ABA-required disclosures, 75.8% of the Class of 2018 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required or JD-preferred employment nine months after graduation. Lewis & Clark's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 20.8%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2018 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.Costs
The average cost of attendance at Lewis & Clark Law School for the 2016-17 school year includes tuition ; fees ; health insurance ; and average cost of living expenses.Notable alumni
- Brad Avakian : Commissioner of the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries
- Richard C. Baldwin : Oregon Supreme Court Justice
- Alexander G. Barry : Politician
- Cliff Bentz : Oregon State Representative
- Craig Berkman: Politician
- Earl Blumenauer : U.S. Representative
- Anna Brown : U.S. District Judge for the District of Oregon
- Kate Brown : Governor of Oregon
- Dean Bryson : Oregon Supreme Court Justice
- Beatrice Morrow Cannady : Portland civil rights activist, newspaper editor
- Robin Kundis Craig : Environmental law scholar
- Charles Crookham : Oregon Attorney General
- Mercedes Deiz : First black woman to practice law in Oregon, Circuit Court Judge
- Sim Gill: District Attorney for Salt Lake County, Utah
- John Hubert Hall : Governor of Oregon
- Heidi Heitkamp : former U.S. Senator and former North Dakota Attorney General
- Ralph Holman : Oregon Supreme Court Justice
- Betsy Johnson : Oregon State Senator
- Donald C. Johnson : U.S. Ambassador to Cape Verde and Mongolia
- Robert E. Jones : U.S. District Judge for the District of Oregon
- Nick Kahl : Oregon State Representative
- Garr King : U.S. District Judge for the District of Oregon
- Jack Landau : Oregon Supreme Court Justice
- Ronald A. Marks : Former senior CIA official
- Michael J. McShane : U.S. District Judge for the District of Oregon
- Jake Metcalfe : Politician
- Clay Meyers: Oregon Secretary of State
- Owen M. Panner: Politician
- Wayne M. Perry : Businessman, International Commissioner of the Boy Scouts of America, minority owner of the Seattle Mariners
- Betty Roberts : first female Oregon Supreme Court Justice
- Peter Robinson : International Criminal Court lawyer
- Phil Schiliro : assistant to the President and Director of Legislative Affairs for President Obama
- Mildred Schwab : one of the first women to study law
- Leonard Shoen : U-Haul Company Founder
- Mary Jane Spurlin: Oregon's first female judge
- Lou Savage : Legal Reform Advocate
- Gail Shibley : Politician
- Bernard Zaleha : Sierra Club National Board of Directors and National Vice President