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Yale Law School

Coordinates:41°18′43″N72°55′41″W / 41.312°N 72.928°W /41.312; -72.928
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Law school in New Haven, Connecticut, US
Yale Law School
Parent schoolYale University
Established1824; 201 years ago (1824)
School typePrivatelaw school
Endowment$4 billion
Parent endowment$42.3 billion[1]
DeanYair Listokin
LocationNew Haven,Connecticut, US
41°18′43″N72°55′41″W / 41.312°N 72.928°W /41.312; -72.928
USNWR ranking1st (tie) (2025)[2]
Bar pass rate99%[2]
WebsiteYale Law
ABA profileStandard 509 Report

Yale Law School (YLS) is thelaw school ofYale University, aprivateIvy Leagueresearch university inNew Haven, Connecticut. It was established in 1824. The 2020–21 acceptance rate was 4%, the lowest of any law school in the United States.[3] Itsyield rate is often the highest of any law school in the United States.[4]

Each class in Yale Law's three-year J.D. program enrolls approximately 200 students. Yale's flagshiplaw review is theYale Law Journal, one of the most highly cited legal publications in the United States. According to Yale Law School'sABA-required disclosures, 83% of the Class of 2019 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required or JD-advantage employment nine months after graduation, excluding solo practitioners.[5]

Yale Law alumni include manyprominent figures in law and politics, including U.S. presidentsGerald Ford andBill Clinton, U.S. vice presidentJD Vance,U.S. secretaries of stateCyrus Vance andHillary Clinton,U.S. secretaries of the treasuryHenry H. Fowler andRobert Rubin, and nineU.S. attorney generals. Other alumni also include currentU.S. Supreme Court justicesClarence Thomas,Samuel Alito,Sonia Sotomayor andBrett Kavanaugh, as well as multiple former justices, includingAbe Fortas,Potter Stewart andByron White; several heads of state, including German presidentKarl Carstens, Philippine presidentJose P. Laurel, and Malawi presidentPeter Mutharika; U.S. senators, governors, and officials.

History

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Yale Law School class of 1883
Four African-American students, class of 1921

Early days

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The school began in the early 1800s in the New Haven law office ofSeth P. Staples, who began training lawyers. By 1810, Staples was operating a law school. He took on a former student,Samuel Johnson Hitchcock as a law partner, and Hitchcock became the proprietor of theNew Haven Law School, joined byDavid Daggett in 1824. The Yale Law School shield (shown at the upper right of this page) shows staples and a rampant dog, representing Seth Staples and David Daggett. The school's affiliation with Yale began in the mid-1820s and in 1843, the school's students began receiving Yale degrees.[6]

Daggett went on to serve as mayor of New Haven, a U.S. Senator, and a judge on Connecticut's highest court. An opponent of education for African Americans and a supporter of colonization, he helped lead opposition to the establishment of a college for African Americans in New Haven and presided over the trial of a woman who ran a boarding school for African American girls.[7]

21st century

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The law school's 15th dean,Harold Koh (2004–2009), madehuman rights a focus of the law school's work, building on a tradition that had developed over the previous two decades. On March 23, 2009, the White House announced the appointment of Koh to theUnited States Department of State as theLegal Adviser of the Department of State.Robert C. Post was selected to replace him as dean of the law school.[8]

In 2022, two federal appeals judges,James C. Ho andElizabeth L. Branch, stopped hiring Yale Law graduates as clerks because of concerns the school suppresses conservative views.[9][10] The school responded by initiating actions to "reaffirm its commitment to free speech", which included an orientation about "free expression" and "respectful engagement", the appointment of a new dean to help law students "resolve disagreements", and a prohibition on secret recordings and disruption of campus events.[9][10]

Academics

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Culture

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Yale Law School is housed in theSterling Law Building, erected in 1931. Modeled after the EnglishInns of Court, the building is located at the center of Yale's campus and contains a law library, a dining hall, and a courtyard.

The institution is known for its scholarly orientation; a relatively large number of its graduates (9%) choose careers in academia within five years of graduation, while a relatively low number (46%) choose to work in law firms five years after graduation.[11] Another feature of Yale Law's culture since the 1930s, among both faculty and student graduates, has been an emphasis on the importance of spending at least a few years in government service.[12] A similar emphasis has long been placed on service as a judiciallaw clerk upon graduation.[13] Its 4.5:1 student-to-faculty ratio is the lowest among U.S. law schools.[14]

Yale Law does not have a traditional grading system, a consequence of student unrest in the late 1960s.[15] Instead, it grades first-semester first-year students on a simple Credit/No Credit system. For their remaining two-and-a-half years, students are graded on an Honors/Pass/Low Pass/Fail system. Similarly, the school does not rank its students. It is also notable for having only a single semester of required classes (plus two additional writing requirements), instead of the full year most U.S. schools require. Unusually, and as a result of unique Connecticut State court rules, Yale Law allows first-year students to represent clients through one of its numerous clinics; other law schools typically offer this opportunity only to second- and third-year students.

Students publish ninelaw journals that, unlike those at most other schools, mostly accept student editors without a competition. The only exception is YLS's flagship journal, theYale Law Journal, which holds a two-part admissions competition each spring, consisting of a four- or five-hour "bluebooking exam," followed by a traditional writing competition. Although theJournal identifies a target maximum number of members to accept each year, it is not a firm number. Other leading student-edited publications include theYale Journal on Regulation, theYale Law & Policy Review, and theYale Journal of International Law.

In November 2013, it was announced that a $25 million donation would bring studentdormitory living back onto campus, with renovations to begin in 2018.[16]

Rankings

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Yale Law has been ranked the number one law school in the United States byU.S. News & World Report between 1990 and 2025. It was tied withStanford in 2025.[17] Since 2020, Yale Law School has held the top spot as the world’s best law school, according to theAcademic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU).[18] Among U.S. law schools, Yale has the lowest acceptance rate and the highest yield rate—whereas less than 5% of applicants are admitted, about 80% of those who are accepted ultimately enroll, either in the Fall following their acceptance or after a deferral.[19][20][21] Since its inception in 2018, with Yale Law School securing the top position, the Fortuna Ranking of US Law School Rankings has consistently placed Yale at #1, while Harvard and Stanford have maintained their positions as #2 and #3 respectively in the latest 2023-2024 ranking. The school also saw a greater percentage of its students go on to becomeSupreme Court clerks between the 2000 and 2010 terms than any other law school, more than double the percentage of the second-highest law school (Harvard Law School).[22] Additionally, a 2010 survey of "scholarly impact," measured by per capita citations to faculty scholarship, found Yale's faculty to be the most cited law school faculty in the United States.[23]

In November 2022, Yale made a voluntary decision to pull out of theU.S. News & World Report Best Law Schools rankings. Describing their methodology as "profoundly flawed," Yale claimed that the rankings discourage low-income applicants and "fail to advance the legal profession" by devaluing programs that encourage public interest profession rather than high-paying corporate jobs. Yale's decision was followed byHarvard Law School, which also withdrew from the rankings.[24]

Admissions

[edit]
Sculptural ornamentation on theSterling Law Building

Yale Law School enrolls about 200 new students a year, creating one of the smallest classes among top U.S. law schools. Its small class size and prestige combine to make its admissions process the most competitive in the United States. In 2023, the median GPA for the entering class was 3.96, and the median LSAT score was 175.[25]

After an initial round of screening by the admissions department, approximately 25% of applications are independently evaluated by three different faculty members. Each application is scored from 2–4 at the discretion of the reader. All applicants with a perfect 12 (i.e., a 4 from all three faculty members) are admitted, upon which they are immediately notified by the school. There are also 50–80 outstanding students admitted each year without going through this review process.[26][27]

The LL.M. Program and the Visiting Researchers Program at Yale Law are amongst the smallest and most selective graduate law programs in the United States. Yale Law admits around 25 LL.M. students and around 10 visiting researchers every year.[28] These programs are usually limited to those students who intend to pursue a career in legal academia.

At Yale law school, admission to the J.S.D. program is exclusive to candidates who have attained exceptional standing in obtaining their LL.M. degree at Yale Law School and exhibit the promise of delivering outstanding scholarly contributions.[29]

Yale Law admitted only men until 1918.[30]

Clinical programs

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Yale Law School houses over two dozen clinics that allow students to represent clients in real-world legal problems. Participation in clinics is common among Yale Law students, with over 80% of degree candidates participating in clinical activities prior to graduation.[31]

Yale Law's clinics cover a wide range of issue areas and legal fields. Students represent clients before courts at all levels of the federal judiciary, state courts in Connecticut and other states, international tribunals and adjudicative bodies, administrative processes, and private arbitration. Yale Law School has greatly expanded its clinical programs in recent years, adding eight new clinics during the 2016–2017 academic year.[32]

Summer school with Paris-Panthéon-Assas University

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Yale Law School signed in June 2011 an Agreement for Collaborative Activities to create an environment for long-term joint research, exchange and programming activities, withParis-Panthéon-Assas University, the direct inheritor of theFaculty of Law of Paris and acting law school of theSorbonne University.[33] They organize, together with theESSEC Business School, a summer school in law and economics, theYale-Paris II-Essec Summer School.[34][35]

Centers and workshops

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  • The Paul Tsai China Center
  • Yale Law School Center for the Study of Corporate Law
  • Center for Global Legal Challenges
  • Cultural Cognition Project
  • Debating Law and Religion Series
  • Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy
  • Yale Law School Center for Global Legal Challenges
  • Global Health Justice Partnership
  • Gruber Program for Global Justice and Women's Rights
  • Human Rights Workshop: Current Issues & Events
  • Information Society Project
  • The Justice Collaboratory
  • Abdallah S. Kamel Center for the Study of Islamic Law and Civilization
  • Knight Law & Media Program
  • Yale Law School Latin American Legal Studies
  • Yale Center for Law and Philosophy
  • Law, Economics & Organization Workshop
  • Law, Ethics, & Animals Program
  • Legal History Forum
  • Legal Theory Workshop
  • The Arthur Liman Public Interest Program
  • Middle East Legal Studies Seminar
  • John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics and Public Policy
  • Yale Law School Center for the Study of Private Law
  • Quinnipiac-Yale Dispute Resolution Workshop
  • Program for the Study of Reproductive Justice
  • Robina Foundation Human Rights Fellowship Initiative
  • Solomon Center for Health Law & Policy
  • The Oscar M. Ruebhausen Fund
  • Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International Human Rights
  • Workshop on Chinese Legal Reform
  • Tech Accountability & Competition Project

[36]

Cost and employment

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The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at Yale Law School for the 2021–2022 academic year is $93,923.[37] In 2015, the Law School Transparency estimated debt-financed cost of attendance (including cost of living) for three years is $289,879.[38] According to Law School Data, the average student who borrowed money to attend Yale Law School in the graduating class of 2022 graduated with $143,437 in debt.[37]

The annual total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, mandatory university health insurance, and living expenses) at Yale Law School for the 2021–2022 academic year is $93,821.[39]

According to Yale Law School's official 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 78.8% of the Class of 2013 accepted full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation, excluding solo-practitioners.[40] Yale Law School'sLaw School Transparency under-employment score is 8.4%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2013 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.[41]

The median salary for a class of 2021 graduate 10 months after graduation was $94,000.[42] and the mean salary for a class of 2021 graduate 10 months after graduation was $136,943.[43]

ABA Employment Summary for 2014 Graduates[44]
Employment StatusPercentage
Employed – Bar Passage Required
73.48%
Employed – J.D. Advantage
14.78%
Employed – Professional Position
3.04%
Employed – Non-Professional Position
0.0%
Employed – Undeterminable
0.0%
Pursuing Graduate Degree Full Time
4.35%
Unemployed – Start Date Deferred
1.74%
Unemployed – Not Seeking
1.3%
Unemployed – Seeking
.87%
Employment Status Unknown
0.43%
Total of 203 Graduates

The law school was ranked #17 of all law schools nationwide by theNational Law Journal in terms of sending the highest percentage of 2015 graduates to the largest 100 law firms in the US (23.58%).[45]

People

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Deans

[edit]
Main article:Dean of Yale Law School
Reading room of the law school's library
  1. 1873–1903Francis Wayland III[46]
  2. 1903–1916Henry Wade Rogers
  3. 1916–1927Thomas Walter Swan
  4. 1927–1929Robert Maynard Hutchins
  5. 1929–1939Charles Edward Clark
  6. 1940–1946Ashbel Green Gulliver[47]
  7. 1946–1954Wesley Alba Sturges
  8. 1954–1955Harry Shulman[47]
  9. 1955–1965Eugene Victor Rostow
  10. 1965–1970Louis Heilprin Pollak
  11. 1970–1975Abraham Samuel Goldstein
  12. 1975–1985Harry Hillel Wellington[47]
  13. 1985–1994Guido Calabresi
  14. 1994–2004Anthony Kronman
  15. 2004–2009Harold Hongju Koh
  16. 2009–2017Robert C. Post
  17. 2017–2025Heather K. Gerken
  18. 2025–Yair Listokin (interim)

Current notable faculty

[edit]
Derald H. Ruttenberg Dining Hall at Yale Law School

Notable alumni

[edit]
Main article:List of Yale Law School alumni

Notes

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  1. ^"Yale endowment earns 40.2% investment return in fiscal 2021".YaleNews. 2021-10-14. Retrieved2021-10-15.
  2. ^ab[1]
  3. ^"Profile Statistics".
  4. ^"Entering Class Profile – Yale Law School".law.yale.edu.
  5. ^"Class of 2019 Employment". Yale Law School. Retrieved11 June 2021.
  6. ^"Our History – Yale Law School". Law.yale.edu. Retrieved2016-02-08.
  7. ^"David Daggett".
  8. ^Robert Post LAW ’77 named Law School dean | Yale Daily News. Yale Daily News (2009-06-22). Retrieved on 2013-08-12.
  9. ^abCassens Weiss, Debra (October 14, 2022)."Yale Law School touts dedication to a 'vibrant intellectual environment' after complaints of cancel culture".ABA Journal.
  10. ^abSloan, Karen; Raymond, Nate (October 12, 2022)."Yale Law trumpets free speech stance amid judge's clerk-boycott push".Reuters.
  11. ^[2]Archived December 18, 2015, at theWayback Machine
  12. ^Statement of Dean Harold H. Koh, "Yale Law School Expands Public Interest Program, Financial Support for Graduates," April 14, 2008.
  13. ^Top-law-schools.com.
  14. ^Yale University."Yale University | Best Law School | US News". Grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com. Retrieved2024-03-25.
  15. ^Kalman, Laura,Yale Law School and the Sixties: Revolt and Reverberations (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 2005)
  16. ^Kingkade, Tyler (2013-11-07)."Yale Law Will Bring Back Dorms Thanks To $25M Donation".The Huffington Post. Retrieved8 November 2013.
  17. ^2009 Top-law-schools.com ("Since US News began ranking schools, Yale Law School has always held the #1 position...."). See alsoABA JournalArchived 2012-07-16 atarchive.today, "It's Official: Yale Law School Tops US News Rankings," Apr. 23, 2009 (2010 rankings). usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/law-rankings April 8, 2025 (2024-2025 rankings)
  18. ^"ShanghaiRanking's Global Ranking of Academic Subjects".www.shanghairanking.com. Retrieved2024-10-09.
  19. ^"Entering Class Profile – Yale Law School".www.law.yale.edu.
  20. ^"Yale Crowned Top Law School In 2017 U.S. News Ranking". 16 March 2016.
  21. ^"10 Law Schools Where the Most Accepted Students Enroll". Retrieved2019-09-27.
  22. ^Leiter Rankings: Clerkship Placement. However, because of its greater size, approximately 2.5 times that of Yale, Harvard had a greater total number of Supreme Court clerks—approximately 25% more.Id.
  23. ^"Brian Leiter Law School Faculty Moves, 1995–2004".
  24. ^Korn, Melissa (16 November 2022)."WSJ News Exclusive | Yale and Harvard Law Schools Abandon U.S. News Rankings".WSJ. Retrieved2022-11-17.
  25. ^"Yale Law School by the Numbers | Yale Law School".law.yale.edu. Retrieved2024-03-25.
  26. ^"The Official YLS Admissions Blog". Archived fromthe original on 2015-12-18. Retrieved2016-02-08.
  27. ^"Law School Description – LSAC Official Guide to ABA-approved Law Schools". Retrieved2008-02-13.[dead link]
  28. ^"– p. 141"(PDF).
  29. ^"J.S.D. Admission | Yale Law School".law.yale.edu. Retrieved2024-03-25.
  30. ^Stevens, Robert Bocking.Law school: legal education in America from the 1850s to the 1980s p. 84.Link to page in Google Book Search.
  31. ^"Clinical and Experiential Learning – Yale Law School".
  32. ^"New Clinics Debut at Yale Law School". 27 February 2017.
  33. ^Schneider, Shana N. (June 11, 2012)."Lecture by law school dean is first event in Yale collaboration with French universities".YaleNews.
  34. ^"Yale Summer Session in Paris: Private Law and Contract Enforcement in the United States and France | Study Abroad | Yale University".
  35. ^"Yale-Paris II-Essec Summer School". Archived fromthe original on 2016-09-14. Retrieved2021-04-15.
  36. ^"Centers & Workshops – Yale Law School".
  37. ^ab"Yale Law School Stats".
  38. ^"Yale University Expense Profile". Archived fromthe original on 2016-02-09. Retrieved2016-02-08.
  39. ^"Cost of Attendance – Yale Law School".
  40. ^"Class of 2014 Employment". Archived fromthe original on 2016-01-31. Retrieved2018-12-27.
  41. ^"Yale University Profile".
  42. ^"Class of 2021 Employment – Yale Law School".www.law.yale.edu. Archived fromthe original on 2022-07-12. Retrieved2022-07-12.
  43. ^"Class of 2021 Employment – Yale Law School".www.law.yale.edu. Archived fromthe original on 2022-07-12. Retrieved2022-07-12.
  44. ^"Employment Summary for 2014 Graduates". Archived fromthe original on 2016-01-31. Retrieved2018-12-27.
  45. ^"The Top 50 Go-To Law Schools".
  46. ^"Deans of the Law School". Yale Law. Archived fromthe original on 2010-06-13.
  47. ^abc"Our History | Yale Law School".law.yale.edu. Retrieved2024-03-25.

Further reading

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External links

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