Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. More important, a Stanford JD/PhD can be completed at one–third the cost of a similar joint degree anywhere else. Because of the cross-crediting of units and because JD/PhD candidates are expected to spend only one year in full-time residence at the law school (the rest of their academic career is spent in the PhD department with full funding ...

  2. We teach law the way it is practiced today: between disciplines, across geographies, in collaboration. SLS programs — JD, joint degrees and degrees in cooperation with other institutions, master’s and doctoral — take advantage of the robust intellectual resources found only at Stanford University, in Silicon Valley and on the Pacific Rim.

  3. Stanford Law School offers a student-centered, future-facing and interdisciplinary approach to legal education. Faculty, staff, students and alumni all support and inspire each other to explore, excel, and contribute to the world through law. Law School faculty have created online course material for use in campus law courses, including a pioneering course in comparative anti-discrimination ...

  4. A paper copy can be obtained by calling the Stanford Department of Public Safety at (650) 723-9633 or by sending an email to PublicSafety@lists.stanford.edu. Step by Step to SLS If you are applying for admission to Stanford Law's JD program for Fall 2024, mark these three important dates on your calend.

  5. Stanford University Law School Overview. The full-time program application fee at the Law School at Stanford University is $85. The student-faculty ratio is 4.4:1. + Show More. At-a-Glance.

  6. Candidates for Stanford Law's Doctor of the Science of Law (JSD) degree are selected from applicants who have completed the SPILS program. Students who are interested in the JSD program should apply directly to SPILS. However, completion of SPILS does not guarantee admission to the JSD program. JSD Application Process.

  7. Mark Lemley is the William H. Neukom Professor of Law at Stanford Law School and the Director of the Stanford Program in Law, Science and Technology. He is also a Senior Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and is affiliated faculty in the Symbolic Systems program.