Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. The American Bar Association (ABA) has an entire section of useful information for pre-law students preparing for law school. These skills are integrated into Stanford majors and courses across the curriculum and include: Problem solving. Critical reading. Writing and editing. Oral communication and listening. Research.

  2. Careers. An SLS education is a life-shaping experience. An SLS degree is a career-making advantage. Stanford Law prepares students to go wherever the law leads, around the globe and into any of the countless fields law influences, from economics to the environment, public policy to public interest.

  3. Stanford, California94305. Stanford University, one of the world's leading teaching and research institutions, is dedicated to finding solutions to big challenges and to preparing students for leadership in a complex world.

  4. JD/MPP. Across the United States and around the world, law is a major instrument of public policy. With a focus on domestic policy issues (including but not limited to the United States), Stanford’s JD/MPP program provides training in essential skills for lawyers interested in shaping public policy, either as advocates for public or private clients or as elected or appointed public officials.

  5. Prospective applicants to the Stanford Law School LL.M. program with a primary interest in corporate law, mergers and acquisitions, corporate finance or securities should apply to the Stanford Law School’s program in Corporate Governance and Practice (CGP) instead of the International Economic Law, Business & Policy program.

  6. Richard Thompson Ford is the George E. Osborne Professor of Law at Stanford Law School. He writes for both scholarly and popular audiences and has published in newspapers and journals such the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, The Christian Science Monitor, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Boston Review, Esquire.com and Slate as well in ...

  7. In 1985, Stanford Law School became one of the first law schools to offer a loan repayment assistance program for its graduates. Today, the Miles and Nancy Rubin Loan Repayment Assistance Program (LRAP) and the Anonymous Public Service Loan Repayment Assistance Program are widely regarded as the best of its kind, providing critical loan relief that enables bright, young lawyers to pursue ...