Let’s be honest. Summer is rushing by and you are starting to get nervous about what the fall brings. That’s because you are about to head off to law school. You’ve heard the stories: the first year they scare you to death, the second year they work you to death, and the third year they bore you to death. Then you graduate, take the bar exam, and head off into the world of working lawyers.
We are committed at Law and Legitimacy to making sure that the next generation of lawyers are prepared to meet the intellectual, ideological and professional challenges to come. That starts now, with you, a 1L in the making.
We want to know what is going in your law schools. How you are being oriented to the practice of law before classes even begin. What you are being taught in the classroom. What the social milieu is like at your school. Hence, we are looking to create what we will call, in grand constitutional tradition, “committees of correspondence,” at law schools across the country. You can contribute anonymously, pseudonymously or under your own name. The choice is yours.
Send us your class syllabi, reading lists, anecdotes about what is going in the classroom and the cafeteria. Our objective here is to provide an honest critique and a safe port in the ideological storms that are sweeping classrooms across the country. We’ll offer tips on how to survive, how to read a case, whether trying to get on law review is worth the trouble, and what to do when you find out your professor is an ideologue.
You can send material to the links here: [email protected]
Here’s our first tip.
Before classes begin, get yourself a copy of Locke’s Second Treatise on Government and read it. Ask yourself where does public authority come from? What is it? What are its limits? Where do rights come from, and do we have rights independent of those the government grants? Finally, what is the role of government – does it preserve liberty, or serve to promote equality? Can it do both?
The questions Locke raises are fundamental to the law and his influence on American jurisprudence is profound. Several years ago, we tutored a young law student about to attend a top-five law school. The student went on to the law review and a clerkship with a federal appellate judge. The student’s experience motivated us to create this feature.
Law school is a grind. But you can get through it, with honors. It’s all a matter of focus, asking the right questions, and pacing yourself. We can help.