Limit this search to....

Law Mart: Justice, Access, and For-Profit Law Schools
Contributor(s): Tejani, Riaz (Author)
ISBN: 1503603016     ISBN-13: 9781503603011
Publisher: Stanford University Press
OUR PRICE:   $26.60  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: July 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Law | Legal Education
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- Education | Organizations & Institutions
Dewey: 340.071
LCCN: 2016049765
Series: Anthropology of Policy
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 5.9" W x 8.9" (0.90 lbs) 288 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

American law schools are in deep crisis. Enrollment is down, student loan debt is up, and the profession's supply of high-paying jobs is shrinking. Meanwhile, thousands of graduates remain underemployed while the legal needs of low-income communities go substantially unmet. Many blame overregulation and seek a "free" market to solve the problem, but this has already been tested. Seizing on a deregulatory policy shift at the American Bar Association, private equity financiers established the first for-profit law schools in the early 2000s with the stated mission to increase access to justice by "serving the underserved". Pursuing this mission at a feverish rate of growth, they offered the promise of professional upward mobility through high-tech, simplified teaching and learning.

In Law Mart, a vivid ethnography of one such environment, Riaz Tejani argues that the rise of for-profit law schools shows the limits of a market-based solution to American access to justice. Building on theories in law, political economy, and moral anthropology, Tejani reveals how for-profit law schools marketed themselves directly to ethnoracial and socioeconomic "minority" communities, relaxed admission standards, increased diversity, shook up established curricula, and saw student success rates plummet. They contributed to a dramatic rise in U.S. law student debt burdens while charging premium tuition financed up-front through federal loans over time. If economic theories have so influenced legal scholarship, what happens when they come to shape law school transactions, governance, and oversight? For students promised professional citizenship by these institutions, is there a need for protections that better uphold institutional quality and sustainability? Offering an unprecedented glimpse of this landscape, Law Mart is a colorful foray into these essential questions.