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The City University of New York School of Law is a law school operated by the City University of New York (CUNY). Although adjacent to Queens College in Flushing, Queens, New York, it is administratively separate. The School opened in 1983 and "it is the only law school which, from inception, has defined its mission as training law students for public service."[1] Accordingly, the school's motto is Law in the Service of Human Needs. CUNY School of Law's child care center was the first of its kind at a US law school.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg called CUNY School of Law "an institution of incomparable value" in legal education. CUNY's focus on practical lawyering skills has had a significant impact on legal pedagogy across the nation. As a result of CUNY's leadership now many, if not most, law schools offer significant clinical opportunities for their students.

The clinical program of the school was ranked #5 by US News in 2005. The school is ranked overall as a 4th-tier law school by US News in 2007.[2] In 2007, US News also ranks CUNY as one of the most diverse law schools. It's also on the list as being one of the least expensive law schools

In its 2007 Guide "The Best 170 Law Schools", the Princeton Review named CUNY Law the "4th Most Diverse Faculty", "3rd Most Left Leaning Student Body" and the "7th Most Welcoming to Older Students"

Students of the law school publish the New York City Law Review.

Contents

Current Dean

Michelle J. Anderson, Dean of the Law School and Professor (appointed in 2006), is a Yale Law School graduate. Her previous position was as a member of the faculty of Villanova University School of Law from 1998 to 2006, where she taught criminal law, criminal procedure, children and the law, and feminist legal theory. Dean Anderson is an honors graduate of the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she earned a B.A. degree in Community Studies in 1989 and the Chancellor's Award for outstanding academic achievement. Her article "Understanding Rape Shield Laws" was the basis for a proposal to reform the Wyoming rape shield law. The bill passed the House but unfortunately did not pass the Wyoming Senate. Dean Anderson is a member of the Board of Directors and Policy Chair for the National Alliance to End Sexual Violence.

Former Deans

  • Charlie Halpern,[citation needed] founder of the D.C.-based Center for Law and Social Policy, a Georgetown law professor, and the acknowledged "father of public interest law" was the first Dean of CUNY Law.[citation needed]
  • Haywood Burns,[citation needed] a famous civil rights attorney, was the school's second and most-notable Dean.[citation needed] Haywood Burns' civil rights career began at age 15, when he helped integrate the swimming pool in Peekskill, New York. As a law student at Yale, he participated in the 1964 Freedom Summer in Mississippi. He was Assistant Counsel to the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund and later served as General Counsel to Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Poor People's Campaign. A founder of the National Conference of Black Lawyers, he was the first African American Dean of a New York law school, leading the CUNY School of Law to full ABA accreditation.
  • Kristin Booth Glen,[citation needed] CUNY Law's previous Dean, stepped down after being elected to the Manhattan Surrogate's Court and was replaced by interim Dean Mary Lu Bilek.[citation needed] Dean Bilek, a graduate of Harvard Law School has since stepped down from her position, giving way to Michelle Anderson, but has remained at the University as the Dean of Special Projects.[citation needed]

Notable Faculty Achievements

  • In 2006, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo appointed CUNY School of Law Prof. Jenny Rivera as Special Deputy Attorney General for Civil Rights.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Julie Goldscheid is a Commissioner of the ABA Commission on Domestic Violence and serves on the Advisory Board of NYLAG's Domestic Violence Appellate Representation Project. Goldscheid is the former Legal Director at Legal Momentum.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Caitlin Borgmann presented her paper The Meaning of 'Life': Abortion and Fetal Personhood at the International Society for Family Law North American Regional Conference held in 2006. She also serves on Barack Obama's Women's Policy Committee.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Ruthann Robson was named Distinguished Professor by the CUNY Board of Trustees in 2007. Prof. Robson was also the keynote speaker at Standard Margin: Contemporary Issues in Canadian Law & Sexuality, a conference held at the University of British Columbia in 2006.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Andrea McArdle presented a session on the design and teaching of her judicial writing course at the 2007 Biennial Conference of the Association of Legal Writing Directors (ALWD) held in Denver on June 14-16. The conference theme was "Best Practices in Teaching, Management, and Scholarship."[citation needed]
  • Prof. Ruthann Robson received a New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) Fellowship.[citation needed]
  • In 2007, Prof. Beryl Blaustone joined a delegation of judges and dignitaries working with Yale Law School in Beijing, Peoples Republic of China, as a Mediation Expert assisting in the instruction of how to include Legal Mediation into Civil Small Claims Court Administration.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Natalie Gomez-Velez serves on the New York State Board of Regents, which sets education policy. She also was appointed by Chief Judge Judith Kaye to serve on the Judicial Screening Committee. Also, Prof. Gomes-Velez has been appointed by Chief Judge Kaye to serve as a member of the Independent Judicial Election Qualification Commission for the Twelfth Judicial District (the Bronx).[citation needed]
  • Prof. Rebecca Bratspies participated in The "New" New Haven School: International Law--Past, Present & Future, a conference at Yale Law School and presented her article, Crafting a Green Landing for Spaceship Earth: Some Navigational Advice from the New Haven School She was also the co-organizer of Free Trade or Fair? The Softwood Lumber Dispute and Beyond, the 5th Annual International Law Symposium in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Penelope Andrews' article, Learning to Love After Learning to Harm: Post-Conflict Reconstruction, Gender Equality and Cultural Values, was recently published in 15 Mich. J. Int'l L. 41 (2007). Her article "The South African Judicial Appointments Process" has been published in the Osgoode Hall Law Journal.[citation needed]
  • Prof. David Nadvorney is the newest contributing editor of the Law School Academic Support (ASP) Blog.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Rhonda Copelon won the 2006 Ruth G. Schapiro Memorial Award.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Sid Harring's report Our Land They Took: San land rights under threat in Namibia, which he co-wrote with Willem Odendaal, was published by the Legal Assistance Centre of Namibia.[citation needed]
  • Prof. Debbie Zalesne's article "Lessons from Equal Opportunity Harasser Doctrine: Challenging Sex-Specific Appearance and Dress Codes" has been published in the Duke Journal of Gender Law and Policy. The piece challenges the doctrine upholding sex-specific dress codes (e.g., women required to wear makeup, men required to keep their hair short).[citation needed]

CUNY Law's Awards & Honors

  • "Public Interest School of the Year", given by the Student Division of the American Bar Association (1998)
  • The National Association of Public Interest Law (NAPIL) named Kristin Booth Glen, Dean of the City University of New York (CUNY) School of Law, as "1998 Law School Dean of the Year."
  • In 2007, the Carnegie Foundation issued a report praising CUNY School of Law for its use of an innovative curriculum with a stronger focus on practical lawyering skills.

Notable Alumni

  • Rev. Dr. Iyanla Vanzant, life coach on NBC's Starting Over was a 1988 graduate of CUNY School of Law.[citation needed]
  • Arthur L. Aidala, prominent NY City defense attorney, New York City Council candidate and Fox News legal analyst was a 1992 CUNY School of Law graduate.[citation needed]
  • Paul Lewis, Chief of Staff to the Chief Administrative Judge of New York was a 1987 CUNY Law School graduate.[citation needed]
  • Benjamin Chevat, Chief of Staff, Rep Carolyn B. Maloney (D), 14th District of New York; Chief of Staff to New York Assembly Speaker Saul Weprin (D-Queens) (1986 to 1994), graduated from the first class of CUNY Law School 1986.[citation needed]
  • Robert Bank, Chief Operating Officer, Gay Men's Health Crisis, graduated from CUNY Law School in 1986.[citation needed]
  • K. Jacob Ruppert, historian and Judicial Law Clerk to Hon. Stephen B. Beasley of the 11th Judicial District Court of the State of Louisiana, is a 1994 graduate and was the founding Co-Editor-and-Chief of our CUNY Law Review, now known as the New York City Law Review.[citation needed]
  • Kary L. Moss, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, is a 1987 graduate.[citation needed]

References

External links

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