Larry Kramer
Dean of Stanford Law School
Larry Kramer is a law professor and the current dean of Stanford Law School. Kramer has been openly critical about the state of the legal profession and has ushered in sweeping reforms of Stanford Law's curriculum since taking over in 2004. Kramer's changes seek a more multidisciplinary approach to legal studies, a stronger emphasis on public service, and a greater awareness how globalization has changed legal practice. Kramer graduated magna cum laude from the University of Chicago Law School in 1984 and has written a book "The People Themselves: Popular Constitutionalism and Judicial Review."
After a rocky start, people will come once again to appreciate the idea that compromise and democracy are synonymous.
Lawyers will be much more fulfilled if they do some public service, suggests Kramer.
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Kramer believes that firms hire too far in advance. They don’t know what they’re getting, and students get locked into their legal specialties prematurely.
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6 min
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As dean of Stanford Law, Kramer is trying to reconceptualize the three-year law program, emphasizing more practical skills lawyers will need.
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9 min
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The Stanford Law dean says the legal education system needs to do more to prepare students to actually practice. There are a wide set of intellectual skills that are essential […]
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The expansion of the legal market around the world has benefited massive corporate law firms at the expense of small community firms, says Kramer.
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5 min
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A conversation with the dean of Stanford Law School.
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27 min
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