University of California, Irvine School of Law | |
Parent Endowment: | $ 1.3 billion |
Dean: | Austen Parrish,[1] Dean and Chancellor's Professor of Law |
Students: | 467[2] |
Faculty: | 145 |
Ranking: | 42nd (tie) (2024)[3] |
Bar Pass Rate: | 88% (July 2022 1st time takers)[4] |
Aba Profile: | Standard 509 Report |
The University of California, Irvine School of Law (UCI Law) is the law school at the University of California, Irvine, a public research university in Irvine, California. Founded in 2007, it is the fifth and newest law school in the UC system. At the time of its founding, it was the first new public law school in California in more than 40 years.[5]
In September 2007, Erwin Chemerinsky was named as the law school's first dean. Chemerinsky served until 2017 when he was hired to be dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law. L. Song Richardson became interim dean in July 2017[6] and full dean in January 2018.[7] Song Richardson served as the dean until 2021 when she was hired as President of Colorado College. Bryant Garth became interim dean in July 2021.[8] Austen Parrish was named as the law school's third dean in April 2022.[9]
Initially, it was announced that the school would be named for Donald Bren, chairman of the Irvine Company, because of his $20 million donation towards the school's founding.[10] In 2008, Bren and UCI agreed that the school would not bear his name, in an effort to maintain consistency with other UC schools and the trend away from naming law schools after major donors.[11] [12]
The American Bar Association granted the school provisional accreditation in 2011, the earliest point at which the school could become accredited in accordance with ABA rules. The school was granted full accreditation in June 2014.[13]
UCI Law hired Duke University School of Law Professor Erwin Chemerinsky to serve as its inaugural dean on September 4, 2007. This offer was rescinded by then-UCI Chancellor Michael V. Drake because he felt the law professor's commentaries were "polarizing" and would not serve the interests of the law school. Drake claimed the decision was his own and not subject to any outside influence.[14] The action was criticized by liberal and conservative scholars who felt it hindered the academic mission of the law school, and expressed disbelief over Chancellor Drake's claims that it was the subject of no outside influence.[14]
The issue was the subject of a New York Times editorial on Friday, September 14, 2007.[15] Details emerged revealing that UCI had received criticism on the hire from California Chief Justice Ronald M. George, who criticized Chemerinsky's grasp of death penalty appeals, as well as a group of prominent Orange County Republicans and Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who wanted to derail the appointment.[16] Drake traveled over a weekend to Durham, North Carolina, and the two reached an agreement late Sunday evening.[16] On September 17, Chemerinsky issued a joint press release with Drake indicating that Chemerinsky would head the UCI law school, stating, "Our new law school will be founded on the bedrock principle of academic freedom. The chancellor reiterated his lifelong, unqualified commitment to academic freedom, which extends to every faculty member, including deans and other senior administrators."[17]
In 2010, University of Chicago Law professor Brian Leiter, in his "Leiter Law School Rankings", ranked the UC Irvine faculty's scholarly impact as 9th in the nation.[18] In 2012, Professor Gregory Sisk and his colleagues at St. Thomas Law School in Minnesota prepared a new scholarly impact study with Leiter consulting, using the same methodology as Leiter's 2010 study. That study calculated scholarly impact by UCI Law faculty from 2007 through 2011. The faculty moved up two places, from 9th in 2010, to 7th two years later.[19]
The 2023 edition of Sisk's ranking ranked UCI Law's faculty scholarly impact as 21st in the nation.[20]
UC Irvine Law's student-faculty ratio is 7.3 to 1, one of the lowest in the country.[21]
To help attract "high-quality" students, the school raised funds for full scholarships for all members of its inaugural class.[22] Four percent of the more than 2,700 applications were accepted to join the inaugural class of 60 students.[23] Classes officially began on August 24, 2009. The school's inaugural class was composed of 34 women and 26 men, with a median LSAT of 167 and median undergraduate GPA of 3.61.[24]
UC Irvine's initial LSAT and GPA statistics rival Southern California's other top law schools, UCLA and USC, which are both ranked among the nation's top 20 by U.S. News & World Report.[25]
Despite offering reduced scholarships to its next two classes (one-half for 2013, and one-third for 2014) and applicant pools dropping to less than 1000 per year, GPA and LSAT numbers for these classes remained largely the same. The school announced that universal scholarships would not be offered for the Class of 2015, while need-based financial aid would still be available. The school funded 20 full scholarships, including ones specifically for students wishing to pursue public interest law.[26]
UCI Law School was ranked #30 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report in March 2015.[27] By then, the applicant median LSAT score was 164 and the median undergraduate GPA was 3.53.[28] The publication ranked UC Irvine 11th for its clinical program, 23rd for its intellectual property law program, and in the top ten for the student diversity index.[29]
Federal clerkships
In December 2011, the percentage of the Class of 2012 students who had received Federal District Court or Circuit Court judge clerkships for the year following graduation was second to highest-ranking Yale and ahead of Harvard Law.[30]
In May 2015, the ABA law school employment data ranked UCI third in the placement of federal clerkships, behind only Yale and Stanford.[31]
According to UC Irvine's official 2015 ABA-required disclosures, 85.45% of the Class of 2015 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation.[32] UC Irvine's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 11.82%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2015 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.[32]
Tuition for 2011-12 cost approximately $40,000 for California residents and $52,000 for non-residents.[33] For the first, second, and third entering classes, tuition was paid for by private scholarships from Mark P. Robinson Jr.,[34] and others at 100%, 50%, and 33% respectively.[35] During the 2019–2020 academic year, 39.1% of students received a scholarship covering more than 50% of the cost of tuition, 55.1% of students received a scholarship covering less than 50% of the cost of tuition, and 2.1% of students received no scholarship.[36]
The total cost of tuition (not including the cost of living) at the University of California-Irvine School of Law for the 2024–2025 academic year is $55,945 for California residents and $68,190 for non-residents.[37] Cost of living on campus is estimated to be $25,404 a year[36]