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Saint Louis University School of Law

Saint Louis University
School of Law
Slu law.jpg
Parent school Saint Louis University
Established 1843
School type Private, Roman Catholic - Jesuit
Parent endowment $880.3 million (2011)
Dean Michael A. Wolff
Location Downtown, St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Enrollment 930 (806 full-time, 124 part-time)
Faculty 129
USNWR ranking 82 in "Best Law Schools 2016"
Bar pass rate 84.3%
Website law.slu.edu
ABA profile ABA Profile

Saint Louis University School of Law, also known as SLU LAW, is a private American law school located in St. Louis, Missouri. It is one of the professional graduate schools of Saint Louis University. Opened in 1843, it is the first law school west of the Mississippi River. The school has been ABA approved since 1924 and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools. Housed in Scott Hall, the law school has the highest enrollment of law students in Missouri. It offers both full- and part-time programs. The school is also home to St. Louis University's Vincent C. Immel Law Library, which is one of the largest law libraries in the state of Missouri. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas studied for his bar exam at the old Omer Poos Law Library on the main SLU campus.

It was the first ABA law school in St. Louis to accept African-American students. In 1908, the law school accepted its first female law students. Starting with the fall semester of 2013, the school will be located in Scott Hall, a new facility in Downtown St. Louis. According to SLU Law's 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 55.5% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation.

Most students are enrolled in the full-time J.D. program. SLU LAW has the only part-time J.D. program in St. Louis. The school also offers dual-degree programs and an LL.M in Health Law and an LL.M Program in American Law for Foreign Lawyers.

During their first year, full-time students are required to take 15 hours per semester to complete the core courses (torts, contracts, civil procedure, property, constitutional law I, criminal law, and legal research and writing). After the first year, full-time upper-division students select from more than 150 hours of upper-division course electives to complete the required 91 credit hours. Of the remaining 61 credit hours, only the following are required courses: 1) Legal Profession; 2) a seminar of the student's choice; 3) a humanities course and 4) a professional skills courses.


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