Scholarship@WashULaw

Document Type

Article

Language

English (en)

Publication Date

2012

Publication Title

Boston College Journal of Law & Social Justice

Abstract

Critics of clinical legal education often malign its expense and look to clinical budget cuts as the primary means of reducing costs in legal education. This narrow focus, however, ignores the important function that clinical legal education plays in educating law students to be ready for practice and assumes other legal education expenses are more important. The 1992 McCrate Report, the 2007 Carnegie Report, and other studies demonstrate that clinical legal education is necessary to produce a well-rounded and practice ready law student. Though clinical legal education should not be immune to cost restraints, neither should any other type of law school expenditure. To succeed in economically difficult and demanding times, law schools must put every aspect of legal education through a cost-benefit analysis for cost-saving potential.

Keywords

Clinical Legal Education, Law School Clinics, Legal Education, Cost of Legal Education

Publication Citation

Peter A. Joy, The Cost of Clinical Legal Education, 32 B.C. J. L. & Soc. Just. 309 (2012)

Share

COinS