cover image   #75 - Fall 2006

Formats:    PDF pages 1-36 + In Memoriam (3.1 MB)
PDF Classmates + In Memoriam (980 KB)
HTML versions of selected articles are linked below.

Highlights:
  • Transforming Legal Education. In order to prepare students for today's changing legal profession, the law school is expanding its clinical program, enhancing international study, and leveraging the expertise of Stanford University's top-rated programs and graduate schools to offer innovative interdisciplinary courses and joint degrees.
  • From the Dean. Larry Kramer discusses the changing legal profession and the need for the law school to prepare its graduates to meet those new demands.
  • Constitutional Law Center. The Stanford Constitutional Law Center officially opens its doors this fall with former dean Kathleen M. Sullivan at the helm.
  • Resource Curse. Professor Thomas Heller's course helps students to understand the paradox of developing countries, rich in resources but slow in economic growth.
  • Building for the Future. The law school campus is growing with construction of the Munger Graduate Residence and planning for a new academic building.
  • The Ghana Clinic. Cindy Liou '07 writes about her overseas legal experience, offered through one of the law school's many legal clinics.
  • Border Enforcement and National Security. Professor Jayashri Srikantiah weighs in on the immigration and national border security debate.
  • Legal Matters: China. Almost 30 years after the reform policies of "Socialism with Chinese Characteristics," the world—and investors—are taking notice of this emerging power. How is the legal profession adapting?.
  • New Faculty. Stanford Law School welcomes Juliet Brodie, Jeffrey Fisher, Joshua Cohen, Jane Schacter, David Victor, and Alan Sykes as new members of the faculty..
  • Corporate Governance Center. The Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance is launched at Stanford Law School.
  • Classmates
  • In Memoriam