Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Louis D. Brandeis School of Law at the University of Louisville opened in 1846 and was named for Justice Brandeis in 1997. Louis D. Brandeis School of Law began in 1846 as the Law Department of the University of Louisville. For most of the nineteenth century the Law Department remained small and focused on practical education.
Brandeis International Journal, a student-run semesterly publication on international affairs, which became the Brandeis Journal of Politics. Brandeis University Law Journal, founded in 2008, is the only undergraduate-edited legal publication not affiliated with a law school in the United States. [139]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brandeis_School_of_Law&oldid=618602808"
The school's principal law review publication was named the Brandeis Law Journal until it was renamed in 2007. The law school's Louis D. Brandeis Society awards the Brandeis Medal. The Louis D. Brandeis School of Law at the University of Louisville opened in 1846 and was named for Justice Brandeis in 1997. The Brandeis University Law Journal ...
Brandeis may also refer to: Brandeis University, in Massachusetts, U.S. Brandeis-Bardin Institute, now the Brandeis-Bardin Campus of American Jewish University, in California, U.S. Louis D. Brandeis School of Law, at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, U.S. The Brandeis brief, a 1908 document written by Brandeis as a litigator
The medal is awarded by the University of Louisville's Louis D. Brandeis Society, and is given in tribute to Brandeis, a former U.S. Supreme Court justice from Louisville and the namesake university's law school.
The Justice was an outlet for students to voice their concerns about the school’s growing pains. As the school expanded, Brandeis president Abram L. Sachar announced plans to build a Jewish chapel in the 1952–53 school year. Earlier plans for a multi-faith chapel had been abandoned, as the administration assumed that Catholic authorities ...
Harvard Law School faculty, with one non-participant, gave a public endorsement to Brandeis' nomination. This was, in large part, due to the work of Brandeis' friend and intimate political ally Felix Frankfurter , who had been appointed to the law school's faculty the previous year in part upon a strong recommendation by Brandeis himself to ...