Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. To help students who want to secure employment in low-paying public interest and government jobs, the Faculty has adopted a Loan Repayment Assistance Program (LRAP). The Program has two goals: (1) to lessen the degree to which financing the cost of a legal education limits career options, and (2) to encourage graduates to choose public interest ...

  2. Mara Redlich Revkin joined the Duke Law faculty in 2022 from the Georgetown University Law Center, where she was a fellow at the Center on National Security and the Law. Her primary research and teaching interests are in armed conflict, peace-building, transitional justice, migration, policing, and property with a regional focus on the Middle East and Africa.

  3. The Duke Law JD class of 2026 is made up of 244 students, enrolled from 6,205 applicants. They come from 35 different U.S. states and territories, and from eight other countries. The class of 2026 represents 108 different undergraduate institutions. Their backgrounds include science, teaching, education, entertainment, the arts, politics ...

  4. Each year, Duke Law School is able to offer merit- and need-based assistance to highly qualified LLM applicants. This financial assistance generally takes the form of varying amounts of tuition scholarships. Duke Law LLM scholarships include the Judy Horowitz Scholarship, offered to an outstanding student with a demonstrated commitment for ...

  5. Jonathan Petkun. Associate Professor of Law. 919-613-7470. petkun@law.duke.edu. Assistant: Taylor Clark. Jon Petkun is an economist and a legal scholar. His academic interests include public economics, civil procedure, judicial and court administration, and access to justice. Broadly, he is interested in the legal and economic organization of ...

  6. Timothy Meyer is an expert in international law—with specialties in international trade, investment and environmental law—and U.S. foreign relations law. He is co-director of Duke Law’s Center for International and Comparative Law. Meyer also serves on the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law and is an elected member of the American Law Institute.

  7. Attending Duke Law School gives you the opportunity to pursue two world-class degrees at once and prepare yourself for a career at the intersection of law and another discipline. Choose from one of our three most popular programs – the JD/LLM in International and Comparative Law, the JD/LLM in Law and Entrepreneurship, or the JD/MA in Bioethics and Science Policy – or combine a JD with a ...