University of Houston Law Center

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The University of Houston Law Center is the law school of the University of Houston in Houston, Texas. Founded in 1947, the Law Center is one of 12 colleges of the University of Houston, a state university. It is accredited by the American Bar Association and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools. The law school's facilities are located on the university's 667-acre campus in southeast Houston.

The Law Center awards the Juris Doctor (J.D.) and Master of Laws (LL.M.) degrees. The law school ranks 58th in the 2014 U.S. News & World Report law school rankings.

According to UHLC's 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 63.2% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation.

The dean of the Law Center is Leonard M. Baynes.

As applicant pool shallows, UH Law Center uses discretion - The ...


§History

The University of Houston Law Center was founded in 1947 as the College of Law, with an inaugural class consisting of 28 students and a single professor. The law school was housed in several locations on campus in its first few years--including temporary classrooms and the basement of the M.D. Anderson Library. The College of Law moved into its current facilities--located at the northeast corner of campus--shortly following its groundbreaking in 1969.

In 2005, the University of Houston Law Center opened its facilities to Loyola University New Orleans College of Law after it was severely damaged in Hurricane Katrina, hosting 320 of the Loyola's 800 students taught by 31 Loyola law professors, allowing the Loyola students' education to continue uninterrupted.




§Rankings

The law school ranks 58th in the 2014 U.S. News & World Report law school rankings. U.S. News also ranks the school in three specialties: eighth for health care law, seventh for intellectual property law, and sixteenth among part-time programs.

In 2010, the school ranked 34th for number of alumni included on the Super Lawyers list. The National Law Journal reported that the Law Center ranked 29th for the percentage of its graduates hired as first-year associates at the nation's 250 largest law firms in 2013. In 2013, the influential law blog "Above the Law" ranked the school 35th on its "Above the Law Top 50 Law Schools List."

University of Houston Law Center - USA - Latin Correspondent


§Facts

As of fall 2013, the law school reported a total enrollment of 775 students, and employs a total of 306 full- and part-time faculty on staff.

For the class of 2013, the school received 2,494 applications, with 215 full-time and part-time students matriculating. The median undergraduate GPA among all students at the school is 3.42, with the 25th percentile at 3.17 and 75th percentile at 3.65. The median LSAT score among full-time students was 160, with the 25th percentile at 157 and the 75th percentile at 162. The class of 2016 is 63.6 percent white and 43.9% female.

Of the 2012 graduating class, 61 percent work in law firms, 26 percent in business and industry, 8 percent in government, 2 percent in public interest, and 2 percent as judicial clerks. The average school bar examination passage rate among those reporting was 88.6 percent.

Annual tuition for the 2013-2014 full-time program is $29,748 for Texas residents and $39,792 for non-Texas residents. Annual tuition for the part-time program is $26.487 for Texas residents and $35,235 for non-Texas residents.

University of Houston Law Center - sculpture of Albertus Magnus ...


§Academics

The J.D. program is 90 semester hours. Entering classes are generally divided into three full-time day sessions of some 60 students each and one part-time evening section of some 35 students for first-year courses.

The Law Center includes six LL.M. programs:

  • Energy, Environment & Natural Resources Law
  • Health Law
  • Intellectual Property & Information Law
  • International Law
  • Tax Law
  • Foreign Scholars - comprehensive LL.M. Program for non-U.S. lawyers

The Law Center offers seven combined and concurrent degree programs in conjunction with other schools: the J.D./M.D. (with the Baylor College of Medicine), the J.D./M.B.A. (with the University of Houston's C. T. Bauer College of Business), the J.D./M.A. in History (with the University of Houston Department of History); the J.D./M.S.W. (with the University of Houston's Graduate School of Social Work); the J.D./M.P.H. (with the University of Texas School of Public Health); and the J.D./Ph.D. in Medical Humanities (with the University of Texas Medical Branch).

The Law Center has eight special programs and institutes:

  • Blakely Advocacy Institute
  • Center for Children, Law & Policy
  • Center for Consumer Law
  • Criminal Justice Institute
  • The Environment, Energy, & Natural Resource Center
  • Health Law & Policy Institute
  • Institute for Higher Education Law & Governance
  • Institute for Intellectual Property & Information Law

The Law Center offers several law clinics for upper-division students: the Civil Clinic, Civil Practice Clinic, Criminal Practice Clinic, Consumer Law Clinic, Domestic Violence Clinic, Immigration Clinic, Juvenile Defense Clinic, Mediation Clinic, and Transactional Clinic.

Flickriver: Photoset 'University of Houston Law Center' by Eric E ...


§O'Quinn Law Library

The O'Quinn Law Library is the school's law library. The director of the library is Spencer Simons. The library has some 435,000 volumes. The library has three special collections:

  • The Frankel Rare Books Collection is a closed-stack collection of rare and out of print books and documents as well as publications of the Law Center faculty.
  • The Judge Brown Admiralty Collection is an admiralty and maritime law collection. Established mainly from an endowment by Houston admiralty lawyers, the collection is named in honor of Judge John Robert Brown, a Houston admiralty attorney who served on the Fifth Circuit. The entire collection was lost during Tropical Storm Allison, but was rebuilt through the Albertus book replacement project, completed in 2007.
  • The Foreign & International Law Collection, which includes books and other documents on Mexican law.

Tropical Storm Allison flooded the library's lower level with eight feet of water in June 2001, destroying 174,000 books and the microfiche collection. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) gave $21.4 million to rebuild the library collection, which was 75 percent of the replacement cost. The collection has since been rebuilt.

University of Houston Law Center - Quinn Law Library sunken ...


§Journals and publications

The Law Center publishes five law journals. The Houston Law Review, established in 1963, is the school's main law journal.

The four specialty journals are the Houston Business and Tax Law Journal (business law, tax law; founded in 2001), the Houston Journal of Health Law and Policy (health care law), the Houston Journal of International Law (international law), and the Journal of Consumer & Commercial Law (commercial law).

Victor Makris teaching a seminar at the University of Houston Law ...


§Employment

According to UHLC's official 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 63.2% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation. UHLC's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 16.5%, 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.

Nathan Neely | University of Houston Law Center Admissions Blog


§Costs

The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at UHLC for the 2013-2014 academic year is $48,478 for a resident and $58,699 for a nonresident. The Law School Transparency estimated debt-financed cost of attendance for three years is $197,267 for residents and $239,808 for nonresidents.

Flickriver: Photoset 'University of Houston Law Center' by Eric E ...


§Notable alumni

  • Nandita Berry, current Secretary of State of Texas and Houston lawyer
  • Victor G. Carrillo, former member and chairman of the Texas Railroad Commission; member of the board of Magnum Hunter Resources Corporation
  • Marcia A. Crone, judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas
  • Eni Faleomavaega, non-voting Delegate to the United States House of Representatives from American Samoa's At-large congressional district.
  • William J. Fleniken (Class of 1936), U.S. attorney and state district court judge in Shreveport, Louisiana
  • Gene Green, U.S. representative
  • Vanessa Gilmore, Judge
  • Richard "Racehorse" Haynes, criminal defense attorney
  • Randy Hendricks, attorney and sports agent
  • I. D. McMaster, former District Judge for the 179th Criminal Court
  • John O'Quinn, former trial lawyer and founding partner of The O'Quinn Law Firm
  • Gray H. Miller, Judge
  • John Moores, entrepreneur and philanthropist, and the owner of the San Diego Padres
  • Dora Olivo, former State Representative
  • Larry Phillips, Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives since 2003 from Sherman
  • Ted Poe, Congressman
  • Joe Rubio, Jr., former district attorney of Webb and Zapata counties in South Texas
  • Michael H. Schneider, Sr., Judge
  • Star Jones, Television personality, lawyer and author; former co-host, The View, former Assistant District Attorney in New York
  • Olen Underwood, Judge
  • Richard Waites, President/CEO of The Advocates, an international trial consulting firm
  • Royce West, State Senator
  • John Whitmire, State Senator
  • Samuel F. Wright, Washington DC-based attorney active in veterans issues; lobbied on behalf of the fraudulent U.S. Navy Veterans Association
  • Philip D. Zelikow, executive director of the 9/11 Commission and Counselor of the United States Department of State


§References



§External links

  • University of Houston Law Center
  • Houston Law Center Student Community Website HoustonGrad.com
  • North American Consortium on Legal Education



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