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Clara Burrill Bruce (1926) was the first black woman elected editor-in-chief of a law review (the Boston University Law Review). [5] BU Law's first buildings were 36 Bromfield Street, 18–20 Beacon Street and 10 Ashburton Place. The first year of courses commenced in 1872.
Angela Onwuachi-Willig (born 1973) is an American legal scholar. She is dean and professor of law at Boston University School of Law and an expert in critical race theory, employment discrimination, and family law. [1]
Keith Hylton. Keith N. Hylton is an American law professor, focusing in antitrust law, economics & law, employment law, intellectual property and torts, currently the William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor of Boston University at Boston University. [1]
Unlike ABA-accredited law schools, MSLAW does not publish employment statistics for its graduates. When asked about the employment outcomes of MSLAW graduates in 2012, Dean Lawrence Velvel said, "I have no idea. We have never collected statistics on any of that, so we don't have any notion." [13]
In MacDonald vs. Cooley Law School, the court found the Cooley Law School' claim, that their employment statistics represented the average of all graduates, to be "objectively untrue" (it was calculated from a sample of 780 out of a total of 934 graduates). The graduates reliance on the statistics was however found to be unreasonable. [26]
Law School City/Town Founded Boston College Law School: Newton: 1929 Boston University School of Law: Boston: 1872 Harvard Law School: Cambridge: 1817 Massachusetts School of Law: Andover: 1988 New England Law Boston: Boston: 1908 Northeastern University School of Law: Boston: 1898 Suffolk University Law School: Boston: 1906 University of ...
Some law schools that allowed women before most others were Buffalo Law School which "begun in 1887 ... and open to women and immigrant groups"; [46] University of Iowa College of Law which "admitted women as law students" since at least 1869; University of Michigan Law School; and Boston University School of Law which started admitting women ...
James Bessen (born 1950) is an economist who has been a lecturer at Boston University School of Law since 2004,. [1] He is presently best known for his data-led research concerning software and innovation. [2] He has also demonstrated the diverse impacts of automation on employment and wages. [3]