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December 4, 2007
Teaching Fellowships for Aspiring Law Professors
For practitioners and others contemplating joining the law professor ranks, many law schools offer wonderful opportunities to transition into the legal academy with one- or two-year fellowships which allow you to enter the AALS Faculty Recruitment Conference (the "meat market") armed with teaching experience and published scholarship under your belt:
- Alabama: Hugo Black Fellowship Program (for Supreme Court clerks)
- Chicago:
- Harry A. Bigelow Teaching Fellowships
- Fellowship in Law and Philosophy
- John M. Olin Fellows in Law
- Chicago-Kent: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- Columbia:
- Academic Fellows Program
- Associates in Law Program
- James Milligan Law Review Fellowships (for Columbia Law Review alumni)
- Connecticut: Visiting Assistant Professor Program (contact Jeremy Paul)
- Cornell: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- Duke: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- Florida: Visiting Assistant Professor Program (Tax)
- Fordham: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- George Washington: Frank H. Marks Visiting Associate Professor of Law and Administrative Fellow in the Intellectual Property Law Program
- Georgetown: Graduate Fellowship Program for Future Law Professors
- Harvard:
- John M. Olin Fellows in Law
- Loyola-L.A.: Visiting Assistant Professor (Tax)
- Loyola-New Orleans: Westerfield Fellows Program
- New York University:
- Northwestern: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- John M. Olin Fellows in Law
- Searle Fellows in Public Law
- VAP in Finance
- VAP in Health Care Law and Economics
- VAP in Negotiations
- VAP in Securities and Finance
- VAP in Taxation
- Pennsylvania:
- Law Faculty Fellowship Program
- Sharswood Fellowship (for Penn Law alumni)
- Princeton: Law and Public Affairs Fellowship
- Stanford:
- Temple: Abraham L. Freedman Graduate Teaching Fellowship Program
- Texas: Emerging Scholars Program
- Tulane: Forrester Fellowship Program
- UCLA: Williams Institute Law Teaching Fellowships -- Sexual Orientation Law
- Wake Forest: Visiting Assistant Professor Program (contact Wendy Parker)
- Washington University: Visiting Faculty Fellows Program
- University of Windsor: Visiting Assistant Professor Program
- Wisconsin: William H. Hastie Fellowship Program
- Yale:
A great discussion of many of these fellowship programs can be found in Patricia A. Cain (Santa Clara) & Faith Pincus (Iowa), Faculty Fellowship Programs That Lead to Law Teaching.
For more information on becoming a law professor, including a discussion of the advantages of these fellowship programs, see:
- Jack Chin (Arizona), TeachLaw: Resources for Lawyers Who Want to be Law Professors
- Jack Chin (Arizona) & Denise Morgan (New York Law School), Breaking Into the Academy: The 2002-2004 Michigan Journal of Race & Law Guide for Aspiring Law Professors, 7 Mich. J. Race & L. 457 (2002)
- James D. Gordon III (BYU), An Insider's Guide to the Faculty Recruitment Conference, 43 J. Legal Educ. 301 (1999)
- Eric Goldman (Santa Clara), Careers in Law Teaching
- Institute for Humane Studies, George Mason University, Law School and Beyond: The IHS Guide to Careers in Legal Academia
- Law Crossing, Becoming a Law Professor: Part 1 and Part 2
- Brian Leiter (Texas), Information and Advice for Persons Interested in Teaching Law
- Rick Swedloff (Temple VAP), The Fellowship of the (Hi)Ring
- Brad Wendel (Cornell), The Big Rock Candy Mountain: How to Get a Job in Law Teaching
- David Zaring (Washington & Lee), Whether a Fellow or a Visitor Be
- Don Zillman (Maine), Marina Angel (Temple), Jan Laitos (Denver), George Pring (Denver) & Joseph Tomain (Cincinnati), Uncloaking Law School Hiring: A Recruit's Guide to the AALS Faculty Recruitment Conference, 39 J. Legal Educ. 345 (1988)
December 4, 2007 in Law School, Tax Prof Jobs | Permalink
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Comments
Why on earth does Alabama have a fellowship only for former Supreme Court clerks? Surely they don't need a fellowship at Alabama!
Posted by: How odd | Mar 2, 2007 10:06:35 PM
The Legal Scholarship Blog has created a page with articles and resources that may be of use to prospective law professors: http://legalscholarshipblog.com/law-teaching-resources/.
Posted by: Legal Scholarship Blog | Dec 4, 2007 8:59:36 PM