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Last Updated:September 24, 2004 1:28 PM |
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The Setting The James E. Rogers College of Law of the University of Arizona was founded in 1915. A highly selective institution consistently ranked among the top twenty public U.S. law schools, the College of Law provides a challenging legal education for 450 racially and culturally diverse J.D. candidates (150 per class) and LL.M. candidates (approximately 25 per class including both the international trade law and indigenous peoples law and policy programs). The College of Law has a full-time faculty of more than 30, many with national reputations, and a variety of visiting lecturers and scholars including, in February 1994 - 2005, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist. The law library's 345,000 volumes and volume equivalents include one of the best Foreign/Latin American law collections in the Southwestern United States, and has recently been expanded. The foreign law librarian, Francisco Avalos, provides LL.M. students with specialized instruction in researching international and foreign law issues. Major student publications include the Arizona Law Review and the Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law The College of Law periodically sponsors symposia in Tucson on a variety of domestic and international law topics. The University of Arizona is a member of the nine law school North American Consortium for Legal Education (NACLE) which is designed to facilitate faculty and student exchanges within North America. In 1999, the College of Law completed a two-year fund-raising, expansion and renovation program, with gifts and pledges totaling more than $100 million. Improvements include additional classrooms and faculty offices, additional funding for library acquisitions and provision of study carrels for LL.M. candidates and the acquisition of nearly 20,000 square feet of additional space for study and legal clinics. Tucson, Arizona, located 62 (100km.) miles from the Mexican border, in the Sonoran high desert, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in North America. The metropolitan area, with approximately 950,000 persons, is the second-largest in Arizona. The high Sonoran desert locale, with mountains on three sides, provides spectacular mild winters and hot summers. Tucson's attractions include the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, the San Xavier Mission, a wide variety of restaurants, a symphony, opera, chamber music series, a minor league baseball team and spring training for the major leagues, as well as excellent golf, tennis, hiking, cycling, fishing and other attractions.
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The University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law, P.O. Box 210176, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0176, Tel: (520) 621-1373 . Copyright © 2002 The Arizona Board of Regents. For web site related questions and comments please contact the webmaster. This web page follows WAI Content Accessibility Guidelines and US Government Section 508 Accessibility Guidelines. |
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