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The Washington State Bar Association, accessed March 29, Latest News Spokesman-Review, March 15, Supreme Court: Bar exam will no longer be required to become attorney in Washington State ...
For years, the Washington State Bar Association has been concerned with the state's growing number of "legal deserts," areas where residents struggle to access legal services.
Mar. 23—Mariah Welch made it through a stressful few months of finishing law school and taking the bar exam. She decided to celebrate with a trip to Italy, where her boyfriend surprised her and ...
The American Bar Association also endorsed the UBE at its 2016 mid-year meeting. [34] However, some of the largest legal markets—including California and Florida—have not adopted the UBE. Concerns include the lack of questions on state law, and that the test provides NCBE with control over the bar credentialing process. [35]
The committee proposed that the Bar Association be an agency of the state, creating "a complete integrated (i.e., mandatory membership) Bar which is officially organized, self-governed and all inclusive." The annual license fee would be $5. In 1933, after much debate and some redrafting, the legislature enacted the State Bar Act (Ch. 2.48 RCW). [3]
The Washington Bar Association (WBA) is a voluntary bar association located in the Washington, District of Columbia area, whose members are predominantly African-American attorneys. The Washington Bar Association was founded in 1925 by a group of prominent African-American attorneys, including Charles Hamilton Houston , George E.C. Hayes , and ...
The Washington State Bar Association said Wednesday that it will postpone an investigation into allegations of misconduct by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson until after the election season.
The Washington Law Review is the flagship law review at the University of Washington School of Law. The first Washington Law Review was established in 1919 and published only a single volume, [1] while the current publication history starts in 1925. [2] From 1936 to 1961, the journal was titled Washington Law Review and State Bar Journal. [2]