TheUniversity of Oregon School of Law is a publiclaw school in the U.S. state ofOregon. Housed in the Knight Law Center, it is Oregon's only state funded law school. The school, founded in 1884, is located on theUniversity of Oregon campus inEugene, on the corner of 15th and Agate streets, overlookingHayward Field.
Oregon Law was founded in 1884 inPortland, Oregon.[6] Richard R. Thornton organized the department that began as a two-year program with three classes per week.[7] In 1906, the course of study was expanded to three years, and in April 1915, the school's board of regents ordered that the program be moved to Eugene as part of a consolidation program within the university.[7] Though the school moved, some of the faculty remained in Portland and started the Northwest College of Law, now theLewis & Clark Law School.[7] In 1923, the school was approved by theAmerican Bar Association (ABA), one of the first 39 schools to earn that distinction in the initial year of the ABA approval of law schools.[8]
In 1931,Wayne Morse became dean.[9] Three years later, the law school organized a chapter of the national law school honor society, theOrder of the Coif.[9] In 1938, the law school moved to Fenton Hall.[9] In 1939, the law school graduatedMinoru Yasui, who later took his challenge to the military curfew on Japanese Americans during World War II all the way to theUnited States Supreme Court.[9]
In 1941, Orlando John Hollis became acting dean.[9] His appointment became permanent in 1945 when Morse resigned to run for the U.S. Senate.[9] During the war years, many law students were called to service.[9] In 1944, there were no graduating students; in 1945, only one student graduated.[9] After the war's conclusion, the school admitted every returning veteran who sought a legal education: out of 26 students who graduated in 1948, 25 had served in World War II.[9]
The post-war era was marked by the Oregon legislature's adoption of law professorKenneth O'Connell's Oregon Revised Statutes.[9] Professor O'Connell was appointed to theOregon Supreme Court in 1958, and later became its chief justice.[9]
During the 1960s, Professor (and later dean) Chapin Clark offered the school's first courses in environmental and natural resources law.[9] Later that decade, Professor Jon Jacobson founded the school's Ocean and Coastal Law Center.[9] In 1968, Eugene Scoles became dean.[9]
In 1970, the law school moved into a new building, the Law Center.[9] In 1974, the Wayne Morse Chair of Law and Politics was established as a "living memorial" to former dean and U.S. senator Wayne Morse.[9]: 19 In 1977, ProfessorHans A. Linde was appointed to the Oregon Supreme Court.[9] In 1978, the school established the first-in-the-world Environmental Law Clinic.[9]
In the new century, the school opened the Appropriate Dispute Resolution Program.[9] In 2003, the Environmental and Natural Resources Law Program opened a fully staffed office.[9] In 2004, the Center for Law and Entrepreneurship opened a Small Business Clinic to assist small and micro-businesses.[9] The school also has started a program in Portland, which moved into Portland'sWhite Stag Building in 2008.[9] The Portland Program focuses on business law and related externships.[9]
For the 2023-24 academic year, the law school is ranked 82nd in the country byU.S. News & World Report's 2024 edition of "America's Best Graduate Schools."[11] The Legal Research & Writing program is currently ranked 1st among Legal Writing programs.[11]
The Environmental & Natural Resources (ENR) Program is ranked 7th in tU.S. News & World Report's list of top environmental law programs for 2024.[11] The program includes a master's of law degree (LL.M.) option.[12][13]
The law school also houses a prominent Appropriate Dispute Resolution Center,[14] which provides courses both to law students and to graduate students interested in Conflict and Dispute Resolution.[15] The ADR program is ranked 7th in the country byU.S. News & World Report for the 2023–24 academic year.[16]
The law school's Legal Research and Writing (LRW) Program[17] also is well regarded.
TheOregon Law Review is the flagshiplaw review of the University of Oregon School of Law. It was founded in 1921[19] and originally run by the school faculty. From 1925–1938 theLaw Review served as the journal for the Oregon Bar Association.[20] By 1967, theLaw Review had been turned over to a student board of editors. Published on a biannual basis, it is the oldest continually published law journal in the Pacific Northwest.[21]
TheOregon Review of International Law is a student-run journal founded in 1999 and published continually since.[22] It specializes in topics pertaining to international law and policy.[23]
The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at Oregon for the 2023–2024 academic year was $81,582 for non-residents and $68,706 for Oregon residents.[25] The Law School Transparency estimated debt-financed cost of attendance for three years is $199,048 for non-residents and $170,167 for Oregon residents.[26]
The Public Interest Environmental Law Conference (PIELC) is a conference held annually on the first weekend in March at the University of Oregon School of Law inEugene,Oregon,United States. The conference is a gathering ofenvironmental activists, advocates, and students from across the United States and the world.[27]
PIELC is organized and hosted by the students involved in the environmental law society "Land Air Water" (LAW). Land Air Water is a student group at the University of Oregon School of Law. It is co-sponsored by Friends of Land Air Water, a University of Oregon/Land Air Wateralumni group that helps advise the student organizers.
The conference has been held since 1983 and celebrated its 42nd anniversary in 2024.[31]
The conference is held on the first weekend in March. Early panels start Thursday afternoon, and the official opening is Thursday evening. It closes with a final address Sunday at noon. Typically, the conference has around 5,000 attendees.[citation needed]
The conference is also of interest to students ofenvironmental law andenvironmental studies, and each year it hosts groups from around a dozen different schools.
The conference is unapologetically pro-public interest and pro-environment. It is a forum for the people who are actively enforcing environmental law and promoting environmental values to share experiences, strategies, and news.[citation needed]