Law in Contemporary Society

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JaredMillerSecondPaper 3 - 26 Jun 2012 - Main.JaredMiller
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Sending a Message: The Importance of the Admissions Interview to Reforming the Legal Professoin

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Sending a Message: The Importance of the Admissions Interview to Reforming the Legal Profession

 When a Columbia Law School admissions officer looked over my resume, I was 3,663 miles away. When another looked at my grades and LSAT score, he had never heard the sound of my voice. When a third read my personal statement, she didn’t have the faintest clue about who I was or what kind of lawyer I was going to be.

All of this is true because Columbia Law School doesn’t interview its applicants. Nor do the vast majority of the country’s other 200 accredited law schools. Ostensibly, this is because the nationwide rush to obtain a J.D. creates far too many applicants for admissions offices to feasibly interview all of them. But the costs of interviewing are definitively overshadowed by the costs of not interviewing: As a result of schools’ decision to choose numbers and words over faces and thoughts, we have a population of lawyers who don’t have the social conscience to adequately wield the power that comes with their unique position in society, and we have a population of law schools who send the message, even before a student has taken a single step into their halls, that the entire profession of law is nothing more than a shell game.

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The bar has worked (somewhat) hard in the last 40 years to try to dispel the notion that this shell game exists. In the wake of the Watergate break-in, when faith in the legal profession was at an all-time low and lawyers started hearing of whispers of federal regulation of the legal industry, the legal profession responded swiftly. Law schools started mandating courses on professional responsibility, state bars began including a Professional Responsibility section on their bar exams and the ABA undertook a large-scale revision of its Model Code of Professional Responsibility. In fact, the ABA now defines a professional lawyer as “an expert in law pursuing a learned art in the service to clients and in the spirit of public service; and engaging in these pursuits as part of a common calling to promote justice and public good.”
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Today, the level of public service in the legal industry is putrid. Eighty percent of the legal needs of potential low-income clients go unmet. Lawyers spend less than 30 minutes per week on volunteer service, a number that is dwarfed by the volunteer service of doctors by a ratio of 10 to 1. At the same time, we’ve just borne witness to a financial crisis spearheaded in part by lawyers helping their clients navigate their way around porous regulations.
 
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Yes, the bar succeeded in avoiding federal regulation, but I’m sure few of my classmates would disagree that such high aspirations for the “professional lawyer” are nothing more than that – aspirations with very little substance in reality. Eighty percent of the legal needs of potential low-income clients go unmet. Lawyers spend less than 30 minutes per week on volunteer service, a number that is dwarfed by the volunteer service of doctors by a ratio of 10 to 1. At the same time, we’ve just borne witness to a financial crisis spearheaded in part by lawyers helping their clients navigate their way around porous regulations.
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To explain this incredible lack of public-mindedness, many critics have pointed to the environment and learning practices perpetuated by law schools, and rightly so. The adversarial nature of the American legal system allows lawyers to prioritize client loyalty, allowing them “to make immoral choices and yet are able to dodge responsibility by claiming they are required to act for the benefit of their clients.” Critics put much of the blame on law schools for inculcating this zealous adherence to client advocacy above larger moral concerns through the use of the case method: Law schools introduce students to law by focusing on “identifying principles of doctrine rather than principles of behavior.”
 
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So why don’t lawyers come close to meeting the ideal that the bar has set out for itself? Many critics have pointed to the environment and learning practices perpetuated by law schools, and rightly so. The American legal system is defined by its adversarial nature; lawyers constantly emphasize their loyalty to their clients’ position as their prime objective, so much that “they appear to make immoral choices and yet are able to dodge responsibility by claiming they are required to act for the benefit of their clients.” Critics put much of the blame on law schools for inculcating this zealous adherence to client advocacy above larger moral concerns through the use of the case method; the way law schools introduce students to the law is by focusing on “identifying principles of doctrine rather than principles of behavior.”
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These criticisms, while all valid, miss the best and easiest change law schools can make to make their graduates more well-rounded and socially-conscious individuals: The interview. The fact that so few law schools interview their applicants before admitting them tells me that they care little about what kind of people they want to populate the legal profession. It also tells me that their expectation is that their students will have the proclivity and skills to become successful counselors but not the proclivity to become agents of change.
 
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These criticisms, while all valid, miss the best and easiest change law schools can and should make to make their graduates more well-rounded and socially-conscious individuals: The interview. The fact that so few law schools interview their applicants before admitting them tells me that they care little about what kind of people they want to populate the legal profession. It also tells me that their expectation is that their students will have the proclivity and skills to become successful advocates but not the proclivity to become agents of change.
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Contrast this with the medical school admission process. There, the interview is an integral, if not dominant, part of the application. For medical schools, there is a heavy emphasis on having applicants with volunteer experience and applicants who can use an interview to demonstrate their commitment to patients’ well-being ahead of profits and lifestyle. The presence of an interview may seem trivial, but this is virtually the first contact that future doctors have with the medical profession. The message coming from the very entities that are allowing them to enter that profession is clear: There is more to being a successful doctor than test scores and grades, winning and losing.
 
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Contrast this with the medical school admission process. There, the interview is an integral, if not dominant, part of the application. For medical schools, there is a heavy emphasis on having applicants with volunteer experience and applicants who can use an interview to demonstrate their commitment to all patients’ well-being ahead of profits and lifestyle. The presence of an interview may seem trivial, but this is basically the first contact that future doctors have with the medical profession. They learn the message from the very entities that are allowing them to enter that profession that there is more to being a successful doctor than test scores and grades.
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That message-sending function is why the interview can be effective in changing students’ attitudes. It would be naïve to think that the insertion of the interview into the admissions process would automatically weed out the large number of potential lawyers who will use their immense brainpower to serve corporations. We are not going to see law schools lower their admissions standards in terms of GPA and LSAT scores in order to accommodate socially-minded applicants, for fear that the Last Judgment – i.e. the US News rankings – will be harsher as a result. Nor do I expect that it will be rather difficult for a smart applicant well-versed in the Admissions Game (as all of us are) to feign social concern in 30 minutes of conversation with a school representative. But, as Thurman Arnold indicated, creeds matter. One of the biggest culprits behind the troubling statistics concerning law students’ career choices is the cultural vat of law school itself; we spend three of the most formative years of our lives, at a moment in time when we are perhaps at our most malleable, in an institution that bombards us with opportunities to work in corporate law and does very little to dispel the notion that we should think otherwise.
 
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As Thurman Arnold indicated, creeds are vitally important in directing the actions of an institution’s members. Medical schools constantly hammer home the creed of ‘social service’ in several ways: Through their mission statements – contrast, for example, the mission of statement of Yale Medical School, which includes the provision of “outstanding care and service for patients in a compassionate and respectful manner,” with that of Yale Law School, which includes nothing similar; through the Hippocratic Oath, an integral part of the medical learning experience that has no counterpart in legal education; and, most importantly, through the interview. And, if the above comparison in volunteer service between doctors and lawyers is any indication, it works. If we want lawyers to try to start treating the world as one composed of human beings, as doctors do, we should start by having our law schools treat their applicants as human beings just the same.
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Contrast this with medical schools, which constantly hammer home the creed of ‘social service’ in several ways: Through their mission statements – contrast, for example, the mission of statement of Yale Medical School, which includes the provision of “outstanding care and service for patients in a compassionate and respectful manner,” with that of Yale Law School, which includes nothing similar –; through the Hippocratic Oath, an integral part of the medical learning experience that has no counterpart in legal education; and, most importantly, through the interview. And, if the above comparison in volunteer service between doctors and lawyers is any indication, it works.
 
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(930 words)
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Yes, creeds matter, perhaps even more so with law students, a group of individuals notoriously prone to groupthink. The interview, while perhaps just a small first step, can shape law students’ career paths at a time when they are taking the first step onto that path, by sending the message that social consciousness does matter. Ultimately, if we want law students – and the lawyers they will become – to try to start treating the world as one composed of human beings, as doctors do, we should start by having our law schools treat their applicants as human beings just the same.
 
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-- By JaredMiller - 27 May 2012
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(998 words)

-- JaredMiller - 26 Jun 2012

 
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  don't depend on advising people how to have your values instead of theirs.

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Eben,

I understand your questions about my faith in the interview , and I hope that I have addressed them in this revision. I fear that I had conveyed too much in the power of the interview in the first draft, which ultimately led to your skepticism. Yes, of course you're right that the interview isn't going to cause a revolution in the mindset of future lawyers - the incentives are too strong for both students and administrations to drop everything and fully embrace the public interest world. But as I indicated in the piece, I do very much believe in the power of message-sending and the great deal of conformity that comes as a result. Law students are conservative people who respond very quickly to signifiers; they grasp a culture and adapt to it. What I'm saying here is that an interview that puts an emphasis on the lawyer as a Public Figure with Social Responsibilities can go a long way in pushing students to choose a socially-conscious career for themselves. Personally, I don't think it matters if it's a professor or an admissions officer conducting the interview (while the professor's standing would obviously give the message more weight, I'm not sure if it's logistically possible), as long as the school is putting out a strong signal to its incoming students as to what kind of lawyer it wants them to be.

With that said, I have only made some rather minor edits (in my opinion) to the essay and would like to improve upon it further. Your statement about this draft being a jumping-off point for another intrigues me, but to be honest, I'm not sure what you're getting at. I agree that you can't tell people to have your values instead of theirs, but I do think people's values are malleable and, really, people our age don't really know what their values are. Perhaps you could expound a bit upon what you meant? I would very much like to work on this some more. Thanks. -Jared


JaredMillerSecondPaper 2 - 17 Jun 2012 - Main.EbenMoglen
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Sending a Message: The Importance of the Admissions Interview to Reforming the Legal Professoin

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Sending a Message: The Importance of the Admissions Interview to Reforming the Legal Professoin

 When a Columbia Law School admissions officer looked over my resume, I was 3,663 miles away. When another looked at my grades and LSAT score, he had never heard the sound of my voice. When a third read my personal statement, she didn’t have the faintest clue about who I was or what kind of lawyer I was going to be.
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 (930 words)

-- By JaredMiller - 27 May 2012 \ No newline at end of file

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First, do you expect the interview to result in the detection and non-admission of people who are going to underserve the community and overserve the desire of the wealthy for facilitation of everything and overregulation of nothing? Surely you recognize that the general consensus of opinion would be that such a person, even assuming he could be detected on the basis of an admissions interview, is an appropriate person to admit if formally qualified, presentably accoutred in relevantly respectable social credentials, and in the top 0.5% of the scoring range on the LSAT?

Second, do you expect the interview to result in the admission of students who will reduce the median or 3rd quartile LSAT score of the entering class, because the interview demonstrates more fully than the admissions essay that they are of a disposition to stir up important positive change in society? Even if one could discover the likelihood that such a person would remain so committed and turn out to be successful in an admissions interview—which is impossible—you do understand, I am sure, that the consensus of respectable opinion would be firmly against compromising collective goals of importance, like retaining our US News and World Report ranking, for such speculative and essentially irresponsible reasons.

Third, do you really think it matters what the disposition of the people you admit is, in these regards, when roughly 90% of the graduates you develop, year after year for the last fifty, take up essentially identical positions as employees of large metropolitan law firms conducting essentially the same lines of practice? Why bother differentiating students along axes that do not matter? Surely you recognize that not interviewing is either magically producing precisely a perfect fit between the raw material taken in and the product sold, or else the system is capable of manufacturing a robust standard product without much concern for the character of the raw material accepted.

Of course your recommendation is correct. I agree with it completely. I don't think your reasons are going to be convincing to the community of decision-makers, for the reasons I've given. Their reasons for rejecting your reasons are crap, as far as I'm concerned, but that doesn't make your reasons the right ones, either.

Education is a very funny substance under capitalism. On the one hand, you're a customer, buying a very expensive service. On the other hand, you're a product, a unit of personnel being supplied to a small ring of buyers, who also pay a very large price, continuously, in what are essentially guild dues. That you are a human being engaged in becoming yourself, to be assisted in the most complex and important process of life, is supposed to be constantly before the eyes of your teachers, whose relationship to you is the one that's supposed to stand outside the cash nexus. But as a fellow remarked once, capitalism tends to dissolve all such relationships in the icy water of egotistical calculation. This water, you will have noticed, is the piss law school swims in.

We should interview prospective students: we, the teachers. We should decide whom we want to work with, as teachers in other graduate schools do. What you call an interview, the face to face conversation in an office, might be different than the interview I would use. But we should do the work of choosing the people we teach. No doubt the values you or I will bring to that activity would not be those brought by others. Which is why I'm not persuaded by your approach, which assumes facts not in evidence about whose values would rule at the end of your chosen day.

Your question, however, seems to me to be a good question precisely because it leads to better ones. I think this draft is the jumping-off point for another that might not be about interviewing at all. Because the real issues you are unearthing, the ones to which you mean to give your attention now that you've found them, don't depend on advising people how to have your values instead of theirs.


JaredMillerSecondPaper 1 - 27 May 2012 - Main.JaredMiller
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Sending a Message: The Importance of the Admissions Interview to Reforming the Legal Professoin

When a Columbia Law School admissions officer looked over my resume, I was 3,663 miles away. When another looked at my grades and LSAT score, he had never heard the sound of my voice. When a third read my personal statement, she didn’t have the faintest clue about who I was or what kind of lawyer I was going to be.

All of this is true because Columbia Law School doesn’t interview its applicants. Nor do the vast majority of the country’s other 200 accredited law schools. Ostensibly, this is because the nationwide rush to obtain a J.D. creates far too many applicants for admissions offices to feasibly interview all of them. But the costs of interviewing are definitively overshadowed by the costs of not interviewing: As a result of schools’ decision to choose numbers and words over faces and thoughts, we have a population of lawyers who don’t have the social conscience to adequately wield the power that comes with their unique position in society, and we have a population of law schools who send the message, even before a student has taken a single step into their halls, that the entire profession of law is nothing more than a shell game.

The bar has worked (somewhat) hard in the last 40 years to try to dispel the notion that this shell game exists. In the wake of the Watergate break-in, when faith in the legal profession was at an all-time low and lawyers started hearing of whispers of federal regulation of the legal industry, the legal profession responded swiftly. Law schools started mandating courses on professional responsibility, state bars began including a Professional Responsibility section on their bar exams and the ABA undertook a large-scale revision of its Model Code of Professional Responsibility. In fact, the ABA now defines a professional lawyer as “an expert in law pursuing a learned art in the service to clients and in the spirit of public service; and engaging in these pursuits as part of a common calling to promote justice and public good.”

Yes, the bar succeeded in avoiding federal regulation, but I’m sure few of my classmates would disagree that such high aspirations for the “professional lawyer” are nothing more than that – aspirations with very little substance in reality. Eighty percent of the legal needs of potential low-income clients go unmet. Lawyers spend less than 30 minutes per week on volunteer service, a number that is dwarfed by the volunteer service of doctors by a ratio of 10 to 1. At the same time, we’ve just borne witness to a financial crisis spearheaded in part by lawyers helping their clients navigate their way around porous regulations.

So why don’t lawyers come close to meeting the ideal that the bar has set out for itself? Many critics have pointed to the environment and learning practices perpetuated by law schools, and rightly so. The American legal system is defined by its adversarial nature; lawyers constantly emphasize their loyalty to their clients’ position as their prime objective, so much that “they appear to make immoral choices and yet are able to dodge responsibility by claiming they are required to act for the benefit of their clients.” Critics put much of the blame on law schools for inculcating this zealous adherence to client advocacy above larger moral concerns through the use of the case method; the way law schools introduce students to the law is by focusing on “identifying principles of doctrine rather than principles of behavior.”

These criticisms, while all valid, miss the best and easiest change law schools can and should make to make their graduates more well-rounded and socially-conscious individuals: The interview. The fact that so few law schools interview their applicants before admitting them tells me that they care little about what kind of people they want to populate the legal profession. It also tells me that their expectation is that their students will have the proclivity and skills to become successful advocates but not the proclivity to become agents of change.

Contrast this with the medical school admission process. There, the interview is an integral, if not dominant, part of the application. For medical schools, there is a heavy emphasis on having applicants with volunteer experience and applicants who can use an interview to demonstrate their commitment to all patients’ well-being ahead of profits and lifestyle. The presence of an interview may seem trivial, but this is basically the first contact that future doctors have with the medical profession. They learn the message from the very entities that are allowing them to enter that profession that there is more to being a successful doctor than test scores and grades.

As Thurman Arnold indicated, creeds are vitally important in directing the actions of an institution’s members. Medical schools constantly hammer home the creed of ‘social service’ in several ways: Through their mission statements – contrast, for example, the mission of statement of Yale Medical School, which includes the provision of “outstanding care and service for patients in a compassionate and respectful manner,” with that of Yale Law School, which includes nothing similar; through the Hippocratic Oath, an integral part of the medical learning experience that has no counterpart in legal education; and, most importantly, through the interview. And, if the above comparison in volunteer service between doctors and lawyers is any indication, it works. If we want lawyers to try to start treating the world as one composed of human beings, as doctors do, we should start by having our law schools treat their applicants as human beings just the same.

(930 words)

-- By JaredMiller - 27 May 2012


Revision 3r3 - 26 Jun 2012 - 04:11:27 - JaredMiller
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