Indiana University Maurer School of Law 2019 JD Viewbook

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COME HERE, GO ANYWHERE

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welcome to Indiana University Maurer School of Law

The Law School has a tremendous history. Founded in

Our legacy lies not just with our alumni. Since our

1842, we are the ninth-oldest law school in the nation.

founding, many of the nation’s most prominent

Our graduates have taken on leadership roles in the

scholars have called Bloomington home. We became

country’s most respected law firms, from Wall Street to

one of the leading institutions committed to the law

Main Street. They have built and nurtured successful

and society movement in legal scholarship, which

businesses that drive today’s global economy. And

during the 1950s and 1960s involved a concerted

they have chosen careers in public service, on Capitol

effort to replace the “law on the books” approach with

Hill, and on the front lines of advocacy for people who

a “law in action” approach.

need it most. That tradition of excellence continues today. We No matter what career they’ve chosen, our alumni

are proud to have pathbreaking scholars in a wide

make a difference in their community — wherever that

range of fields. Our expertise is strongest in research

may be. Every year, nearly 60 percent of our entering

focused on intellectual property, international and

JD class comes from outside Indiana, representing

comparative law, cybersecurity, environmental, and

over 100 undergraduate institutions in 25 to 30

criminal law, as well as tax, business law, and public

states. When they graduate, more than 60 percent

interest law.

choose jobs outside Indiana. With each new class, we build on these traditions. We Part of our proud legacy is how our graduates have left

look for remarkable individuals: students who want

their mark. They include the first Japanese-American

to be part of a lively community of smart, motivated,

admitted to the bar in the US, the first African

supportive classmates who are ready to learn and

American to serve on any state supreme court, the

eager to make a difference outside the classroom.

first woman chief justice of Wisconsin, and the first

For us, we are building not just a class, but protecting

woman chief justice of Indiana. Our alumni include

a legacy.

giants like US Supreme Court Justice Sherman In these pages, you will learn a little more about this

Minton, US Representative Lee Hamilton, and US

great institution. I look forward to meeting you and

Senator Birch Bayh.

seeing you in Bloomington. The Law School’s global influence has at times been even greater. Each year, nearly two dozen students participate in our unique Stewart Fellows program, serving as interns in law firms, nongovernmental

Austen Parrish

organizations, and businesses in ten countries

Dean and James H. Rudy Professor of Law

around the world. We have one of the oldest LLM and SJD programs for international lawyers and collaborations with universities around the globe.

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BAIER HALL IS THE LAW SCHOOL’S MAIN BUILDING. IT IS LOCATED ON THE CORNER OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY’S FLAGSHIP BLOOMINGTON CAMPUS ADJACENT TO DUNN’S WOODS, BUT ONLY STEPS AWAY FROM SHOPPING, RESTAURANTS, AND FREE BUS SERVICE.

3 9 34 15 20 25 27

Third-most beautiful college campus (Condé Nast Traveler)

Ninth-oldest law school in US

Ranked 34th in the nation by U.S. News

Among top 15 public law schools

Tax program ranked 20th

Intellectual property program ranked 25th

International program ranked 27th

UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED, RANKINGS ARE FROM U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT BEST GRADUATE SCHOOLS, 2020 EDITION

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the 2019-20 1L class:

171 162/3.80 57% 22% 30 56% 96 21-50

Enrolled

Median LSAT / GPA

Women

Minority

States represented

Non-resident

Undergraduate institutions

Age range

AS OF AUGUST 15, 2019

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Indiana Law faculty are renowned for their passion for teaching and for being caring role models and supportive mentors. In fact, many of them have received Indiana University’s highest teaching honors. Their classroom discussions are rigorous and thorough, and they have a gift for challenging your old ways of thinking as never before. As part of our community, you will be invited — and expected — to join our esteemed professors in fostering the Law School’s vibrant intellectual life. Our teachers are scholars, too. They are graduates of the nation’s finest law schools — including this one — and their research informs and shapes contemporary legal discourse, from cybersecurity and constitutional reform to patent law and conservation. They include an award-winning documentary filmmaker, acclaimed authors, Fulbright Scholars, a Carnegie Fellow, a US Supreme Court clerk, Wall Street lawyers, accomplished litigators, and members of the Council on Foreign Relations, the American Law Institute, and the American Society of International Law. Our faculty’s research makes them some of the most sought-after experts and influential legal thinkers in the world, which is why we ranked ninth among all US law schools for downloads of faculty research on the Social Science Research Network website in 2017-18.

passionate teachers, influential scholars

In addition, the Law School attracts impressive adjunct faculty and leading scholars to serve as guest lecturers. Every year we host numerous scholarly conferences that enrich the intellectual life of the Law School. As an upper-division student, you will be able to work alongside our faculty as an assistant, whether in one of the research centers they direct, or aiding them with their independent scholarship. Either way, you will gain additional skills and knowledge from our talented community of teacher-scholars.

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(PhD, LLM, or SJD)

research from Social Science

% of faculty with advanced degrees

Rank of downloads of faculty Research Network

6.0

/1

Student/faculty ratio

Number of faculty diversity hires in past eight years

PROF. H. TIMOTHY LOVELACE TEACHES ADVANCED CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, AMERICAN LEGAL HISTORY, AND A COURSE IN RACE, AMERICAN SOCIETY, AND THE LAW.

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HIGHLY CREDENTIALED FACULTY FROM AROUND THE WORLD Joseph L. Hoffmann, JD, U. of Washington

Ashley Ahlbrand, JD, William & Mary Alfred C. Aman, Jr., JD, Chicago

Sarah Jane Hughes, JD, U. of Washington

Amy G. Applegate, JD, Harvard

Feisal A. al-Istrabadi, JD, Indiana (Maurer) /

John S. Applegate, JD, Harvard

A. James Barnes, JD, Harvard

Mark D. Janis, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Jeannine Bell, JD, PhD, Michigan

Dawn E. Johnsen, JD, Yale

Terry A. Bethel, JD, Ohio State

Margaret Kiel-Morse, JD, Michigan State

Brian J. Broughman, JD, Michigan / PhD, Berkeley

Jayanth K. Krishnan, JD, Ohio State / PhD, Wisconsin

Kevin D. Brown, JD, Yale

Seth M. Lahn, JD, Yale

Keith A. Buckley, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Julia C. Lamber, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Hannah L. Buxbaum, JD, Cornell / LLM, University

Marshall A. Leaffer, JD, Texas / LLM, NYU

Leandra Lederman, JD, LLM, NYU

of Heidelberg

LLM, SJD, Northwestern

Fred H. Cate, JD, Stanford

H. Timothy Lovelace, JD, PhD, Virginia

Daniel Cole, JD, Lewis & Clark / JSD, Stanford

Jody L. Madeira, JD, PhD, Penn

Daniel O. Conkle, JD, Ohio State

Kimberly Mattioli, JD, Michigan

Stephen A. Conrad, JD, Yale / PhD, Harvard

Ethan Michelson, PhD, Chicago

Paul P. Craig, BCL, Oxford

Michael Mattioli, JD, Penn

Yvonne M. Cripps, LLB, LLM, Victoria U. of Wellington,

Timothy Morrison, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Donna M. Nagy, JD, NYU

New Zealand / PhD, Cambridge

Laura B. Daghe, JD, Illinois

Mark E. Need, JD, MBA, Indiana (Maurer)

Kenneth G. Dau-Schmidt, JD, PhD, Michigan

Christiana Ochoa, JD, Harvard

Jost Delbrück, LLM, Indiana (Maurer)

Aviva A. Orenstein, JD, Cornell

Robert Downey, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Austen L. Parrish, JD, Columbia

Roger B. Dworkin, JD, Stanford

William D. Popkin, LLB, Harvard

Jessica M. Eaglin, JD, Duke

Jennifer S. Prusak, JD, Michigan

Lisa A. Farnsworth, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Victor D. Quintanilla, JD, Georgetown

David P. Fidler, JD, Harvard

Cynthia Reichard, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Robert L. Fischman, JD, Michigan

Lauren K. Robel, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Gina-Gail S. Fletcher, JD, Cornell

Steve Sanders, JD, Michigan

Pamela Foohey, JD, Harvard

John A. Scanlan, JD, Notre Dame / PhD, Iowa

Luis Fuentes-Rohwer, JD, PhD, Michigan /

Ryan W. Scott, JD, Minnesota

Gene E. Shreve, LLB, LLM, Harvard

LLM, Georgetown

Ralph F. Gaebler, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Earl R.C. Singleton, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

David Gamage, JD, Yale

Jeffrey E. Stake, JD, Georgetown

Ann J. Gellis, JD, NYU

J. Alexander Tanford, JD, LLM, Duke

Charles G. Geyh, JD, Wisconsin

Inge Van der Cruysse, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Donald H. Gjerdingen, JD, William Mitchell / LLM, Yale

Shana Wallace, JD, Chicago

Sophia C. Goodman, JD, Case Western

Timothy William Waters, JD, Harvard

Gabrielle L. Goodwin, JD, Chicago Kent

W. William Weeks III, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Edwin H. Greenebaum, LLB, Harvard / LLM, Michigan

Carwina Weng, JD, NYU

Norman J. Hedges, JD, Indiana (Maurer)

Deborah Widiss, JD, Yale

Robert H. Heidt, JD, Wisconsin

Susan H. Williams, JD, Harvard

William D. Henderson, JD, Chicago

David C. Williams, JD, Harvard

J. William Hicks, JD, Michigan

Elisabeth Zoller, LLD, Université Paris II

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THE JEROME HALL LAW LIBRARY IS THE ACADEMIC HUB OF THE LAW SCHOOL. SURROUNDED BY THE BEAUTIFUL ACREAGE OF DUNN’S WOODS, IT IS ONE OF THE NATION’S TOP-RANKED LAW LIBRARIES, WITH AN EXTENSIVE DIGITAL REPOSITORY AND LIBRARIANS WITH LAW DEGREES.

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a different approach to your first year

The Legal Profession

Practice Group Advisors

In addition to the usual 1L courses — Civil Procedure, Con-

As a 1L, you will be paired with a practice group advisor, an

tracts, Torts, Property, Criminal Law, and Constitutional

upper-division student who will work closely with you and

Law — you will enroll in an innovative professional devel-

a small group of your classmates as you navigate the first

opment course called The Legal Profession. In The Legal

year of law school. PGAs will help you prepare for classes,

Profession I, you will hear from experienced professionals

get ready for exams, and assess your interests and abilities

from a variety of practice settings while you perfect your

as you define your professional goals and aspirations.

résumé and determine your career path. In The Legal Profession II, you will wrestle with realistic problems that ask you to apply the rules of professional responsibility and to comprehend how economics, workplace pressures, and organizational incentives affect lawyers. Working in teams, you will present or enact solutions to those problems and hear critiques from your fellow students.

THE IU SAMPLE GATES

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AS AN INDIANA LAW STUDENT, YOU CAN CHOOSE FROM A WIDE VARIETY OF COURSES IN ALL THE AREAS YOU WOULD EXPECT FROM A TOP-TIER LAW SCHOOL. THE UPPERDIVISION COURSES BELOW ARE GROUPED BY OUR 17 AREAS OF FOCUS, BUT YOU CAN SELECT THE COMBINATION BEST SUITED TO YOUR INTERESTS AND CAREER GOALS AFTER YOU COMPLETE THE REQUIRED FIRST-YEAR COURSES.

First-year courses Fall semester:

Seminar in Administrative Law:

Seminar in Law and Economics

Lawyering in the Modern

Transactional Drafting

Administrative State

Transactional Drafting: The Anatomy

Civil Procedure Contracts The Legal Profession I Legal Research and Writing Torts

Accounting for Lawyers

Banking Law

Children and the Law

Bankruptcy

Civil Rights Statutes

Business Planning

Constitutional Litigation

Business Reorganization

Employment Discrimination

Corporate Finance Law

Feminist Jurisprudence

Corporations

Gender and the Law

Deliberative Leadership

Human Rights

Entertainment Law

Human Trafficking: Child Exploitation

Entrepreneurship Law Clinic

Immigration Law

Administrative law and government regulation

Financial Institutions

Law and Education: Advanced

International Business Negotiations

International Business Transactions

Law and Education: Higher Education

International Securities Regulation

Law and Education: Leadership in

Administrative Law

Law and Sports

American Legal History

The Lawyer as a Business Executive

Law and Education: Legal Perspectives

Antitrust Law

Legal Issues in Mergers and

Banking Law

Acquisitions

Law and Education: Workshop on

Employment Discrimination

Legal Operations

Employment Law

Mergers and Acquisitions*

Lawyering in the Public Interest

European Union Law

Negotiable Instruments

Poverty Law

Immigration Law

Non-Profit Law Clinic

Race, American Society, and the Law

Introduction to Environmental Law

Non-Profit Organizations

Seminar in Children and the Law

Land Use Controls

Principles of Law and Economics

Seminar in Comparative Inequality

Lawyering in the Public Interest

Sales

Seminar in Voting Rights

Legislation

Secured Transactions

Public Natural Resources

Securities Regulation

Representing the State

Seminar in Corporate Law:

Securities Regulation

Criminal Law The Legal Profession II Legal Research and Writing Property

Upper-division areas of focus

Financial Regulation

PROFESSIONALISM DURING ORIENTATION.

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Civil rights and equality American Legal History

Constitutional Law

1L STUDENTS TAKE AN OATH OF

Business and commercial law

of a Deal

Antitrust Law Spring semester:

CURRICULUM

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School Law†

Special Education†

on Education†

Problems in Education Leadership†


Constitutional design After Atrocities: Processes of

Post-Conflict Justice

Constitutionalism in the Middle East Constitutional Design in Multiethnic Societies Constitutional Law II Human Rights Seminar in Comparative Law:

Introduction to Environmental Law

Legal Operations

Intellectual Property Antitrust

Seminar in International Law:

Public Natural Resources Law

Mediation

Intellectual Property Colloquium

Negotiations

Intellectual Property Transactions

Seminar in Law and Society of China

Non-Profit Law Clinic

International Intellectual Property

Seminar in Law and Society:

Project Management

Law and Biomedical Advance

Secured Transactions

Patent Prosecution

Seminar in Transnational Law

Trial Advocacy

Patent Trial Practice

Wills and Trusts

Seminar: Introduction to

The Second Amendment

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Sexuality, Reproduction, and

the Constitution

Seminar in Jurisprudence Seminar in the Supreme Court as

an Institution

Seminar on Judicial Conduct

Gender, and States of Emergency

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

American Legal History Constitutional History Colloquium Constitutional Law II Criminal Procedure: Trial Criminal Procedure: Investigation Federal Jurisdiction Law and Political Theory: Institutional

Analysis and Development§

Law and Religion Seminar in Comparative Law:

Current Issues in Law and Policy§

Water Law

Copyright Law

Intellectual Property Externship

Labor Law

Cybersecurity

Intellectual Property Law Clinic

Entertainment Law

Intellectual Property Practicum:

Children and the Law

Health Law

Criminal Law Externship

Community Legal Clinic

Health Privacy Law

Criminal Procedure: Capstone

Domestic Relations Mediation

Information Privacy Law I

Criminal Procedure: Investigation

Estate Planning

Information Privacy Law II

Criminal Procedure: Trial

Family Law

Information Security Law

Federal Criminal Law and White-

Family and Children Mediation Clinic

Patent Law

Feminist Jurisprudence

Seminar in International Law:

Federal Habeas Litigation

Gender and the Law

Seminar in Criminal Law:

Mediation

Seminar in Introduction to

Comparative Law: Constitutional Design

Negotiations

Seminar in Criminal Law:

Public Interest Internship Program

Seminar in Intellectual Property:

Comparative Law: Law without

Strategies in Critical Reading and

Seminar in Criminal Law: Punishment

Seminar in Law and Medicine

Constitutional Design in Multiethnic

Advanced Appellate Advocacy

Seminar in Children and the Law

Survey of Intellectual Property

Societies

Advanced Legal Writing

Trademarks and Unfair Competition

Constitutionalism in the Middle East

Advanced Trial Practice

European Union Law

Advocacy — Interscholastic

Human Rights

Immigration Law

Alternative Dispute Resolution

International Business Negotiations

Appellate Advocacy

International Criminal Law

Appellate Practice and Procedure

International Environmental Law

Appellate Practice and Procedure —

International Intellectual Property

Criminal Appeal: From Transcript

International Securities Regulation

to Argument

Advanced courses:

Seminar in Comparative Inequality

Civil Procedure II

Advanced Patent Law

Seminar in Comparative Law:

Commercial Arbitration

Entertainment Law

Constitutional Litigation

Federal Circuit Advocacy

Seminar in International Law:

Complex Litigation

Conflict of Laws

Wildlife Law Other related courses: Land Use Controls

Criminal Appeal from Transcript

to Argument

Collar Crime

Current Issues

Federal Sentencing

in Theory and Practice

Family law

Writing: Family Law

Seminar in Law and Psychology of

Crime, Culpability, and Punishment

General practice

Drone Law

Biotechnological Innovation

Data Law and Policy

Intellectual property

Seminar in Constitutional Law

Other related courses:

Administrative Law

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Advanced Trial Practice

Advanced Legal Research

Core courses:

Evidence

Bankruptcy

Copyright Law

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Constitutional Litigation

Corporations

Patent Law

The Courts, the Democratic Process,

Federal Jurisdiction

Criminal Procedure — Trial

Survey of Intellectual Property

and the People

Trial Advocacy

Criminal Procedure — Investigation

Trademark and Unfair Competition Law

Evidence

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Constitutional Interpretation

and Democracy

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Labor and employment law

Labor and Employment Arbitration

Constitutional Monarchy

Congress, Presidency, and the Courts

Biotechnological Innovation

Entrepreneurship Law Clinic

Appellate Practice and Procedure:

Issues Related to the Press‡

Constitutional Law II

and Democracy

Seminar in Environmental Law:

Legislation

Advanced Constitutional Law:

Conservation Law Clinic

Immigration and Law

Employment Law

Core courses:

Advanced Constitutional Law

Enrichment courses:

Clinics and practicum:

Criminal law and procedure

Constitutional Interpretation

Administrative Law

Climate Law and Policy

Seminar in Intellectual Property:

Constitutional law

Advanced courses:

The Great War

Information, communications, and privacy law

State Constitutional Law

Constitutional Monarchy

Seminar in Constitutional Design: Rights,

Seminar in Constitutional Law:

Environmental law

Family Law Independent Clinical Project

Core courses: Administrative Law

The First Amendment

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International Law Introduction to Income Tax

Data Law and Policy

Entertainment Law

International and comparative law

Core courses: Employment Discrimination

Related courses: Administrative Law Antitrust Law Corporations Immigration Law Legislation

International Law

Mediation

International Business Transactions

Negotiations

Advanced courses:

and the Economy

the State

Constitutional Monarchy

Drone Law

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Trial Advocacy

Litigation and alternative dispute resolution

Moot Courts


Domestic Relations Mediation

Decision-Making for Lawyers

Estate Planning

Evidence

Deliberative Leadership

International Business Transactions

Federal Circuit Advocacy

Domestic Relations Mediation

Law and Philanthropy

Federal Habeas Litigation

Entrepreneurship Law Clinic

Legislation

Federal Jurisdiction

Estate Planning

Mergers and Acquisitions*

Judicial Field Placements

Ethics and Compliance

Litigation Drafting

Federal Circuit Advocacy

Mediation

Family and Children Mediation Clinic

Negotiations

Intellectual Property Externship

Patent Trial Practice

Intellectual Property Practicum

Pre-trial Litigation

Judicial Field Placements

Pre-trial Litigation: Courtroom Procedure

Lawyering in the Public Interest

Pre-trial Litigation: Criminal Practice

Legal Operations

Pre-trial Litigation: Depositions

Mediation

Products Liability

Modern Law Practice I

Protection Order Litigation

Modern Law Practice II

Remedies and Equity

Modern Law Practice:

Representing the State

Seminar on Judicial Conduct

Modern Small Firm Practice

Trial Advocacy

Negotiations

Field Placement Program

Patent Prosecution

Property Estate Planning Land Use Controls Law and Philanthropy Law and Political Theory: Institutional

Analysis and Development§

Real Estate Finance Transaction Drafting: Real Estate Wills and Trusts

Patent Trial Practice Private Practice Externship Project Management

PERSONAL ATTENTION

Public Interest Internship Public Speaking

WITH OUR 6.0/1 STUDENT/FACULTY RATIO

Semester Public Interest Program

AND SMALL CLASS SIZES, YOU WILL HAVE

Trial Advocacy

UNPARALLELED ACCESS TO FACULTY, BOTH IN AND OUT OF CLASS.

Tax Core courses:

Skill development Advanced Appellate Advocacy Advanced Legal Research Advanced Trial Practice Advocacy — Interscholastic

Moot Courts

Alternative Dispute Resolution Appellate Advocacy Commercial Arbitration

Introduction to Income Tax Advanced courses: Typical first-year class section size

Corporate Tax Partnership Tax Seminar in Tax Policy State and Local Tax Strategic Business and Tax Planning*

Average upper-division class size

Tax Policy Colloquium Transactional Drafting: Tax

Community Legal Clinic

Allied Law School courses:

Conservation Law Clinic

Accounting for Lawyers

Criminal Law Externship

Corporate Finance

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* OFFERED THROUGH THE IU KELLEY SCHOOL OF BUSINESS † OFFERED THROUGH THE IU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION ‡ OFFERED THROUGH THE IU MEDIA SCHOOL § OFFERED THROUGH THE IU O'NEILL SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS

% of upper-division classes with 15 or fewer students

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66 10 78


150+ 10 17+ 24

INTERNATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES Indiana Law offers a unique global fellowship pro-

Dublin, Hamburg, Hong Kong, Leiden, Milan, New Delhi,

gram that gives you the opportunity to work directly

Paris, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Shenzhen, Taipei,

with some of the nation’s leading legal scholars on

and Warsaw. Summer study is available in Hamburg,

issues affecting countries around the globe. Each

London, and Paris, among others.

of these programs features a semester abroad and Even if you spend all three years in Bloomington, you

a Stewart Fellowship: a summer externship with a

will have many international opportunities. We have

prestigious law firm, non-governmental organization,

one of the world’s oldest LLM programs, hosting about

or multinational company. When you return to cam-

60 graduate students from 20 countries each year. You

pus, you will serve as a paid research assistant for

will attend classes with LLM students and share global

a faculty member conducting research on timely

perspectives. We also offer a JD/LLM if you choose to

topics relevant to your country of interest. Stewart

Stewart Fellows since 2010

Stewart Fellows global externship countries

Summer and semester exchange programs

Partnerships with international law schools

BEIJING

extend your studies on the international stage.

Fellowships are offered in Argentina, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Poland, Thailand, and Vietnam. If a traditional semester or summer abroad better suits your goals, we offer semester exchange programs with partner universities in Auckland, Barcelona, Beijing,

BANGKOK

BUENOS AIRES

SEOUL

NEW DELHI

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WARSAW

2019 STEWART FELLOWS 19


AS A LAWYER, YOU WILL SPEND YOUR PROFESSIONAL LIFE SOLVING COMPLEX PROBLEMS THAT SPAN MANY DISCIPLINES. AS AN INDIANA LAW STUDENT, YOU WILL HAVE ACCESS TO THE RESOURCES OF A MAJOR RESEARCH UNIVERSITY THAT WILL PREPARE YOU FOR THE CREATIVE PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS REQUIRED OF TODAY’S LAWYERS.

10+ joint degree programs

Joint degrees with IU’s #21 ranked Kelley School of Business JD/MBA JD/MBAA (Accounting) JD/MSA (Accounting)

Joint degrees with IU’s #1 ranked School of Public and Environmental Affairs

the vibrant life of a major research university

JD/MPA JD/MSES

Other IU joint degrees JD/MA or MS in Telecommunications JD/MLS in Library and Information Science JD/MA in Journalism JD/MPH in Public Health JD/MA in Russian and East European Studies JD/MS in Cybersecurity Risk Management

Joint degrees with international partners JD/MBA with Sungkyunkwan University (Seoul) JD/LLM with Université Panthéon-Assas (Paris II) JD/LLM with Trinity College Dublin JD/LLM with Peking University (Beijing) / PKU School of Transnational Law (Shenzhen) JD/LLM with Jindal Global Law School (Sonipat, India)

In addition to these joint degrees, the Law School offers several other formal joint degree programs, or you can create an individually designed joint degree with other schools and departments to meet your learning and career goals. The Law School will coordinate with the other school or department to establish the joint or concurrent program. EXECUTIVE ASSOCIATE DEAN CHRISTIANA OCHOA TEACHES CONTRACTS, A STAPLE OF THE 1L CURRICULUM.

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Indiana Law’s research centers The Center for Constitutional Democracy helps people in post-conflict societies build legal institutions that will allow them to live together in peace, justice, and democracy. It is one of the only centers in the world to do active constitutional design consulting. The Milt and Judi Stewart Center on the Global Legal Profession is focused on the unprecedented challenges lawyers are facing around the world and developing research and training materials to assist current and future attorneys in their understanding of international legal systems.

CYBERSECURITY AND INFORMATION PRIVACY Innovative programs, many options Not long ago, cybersecurity was confined to the IT department, where technicians worked behind the scenes to protect companies’ data and customers’ privacy. Times have changed. Today’s organizations need professionals at all levels who understand the technical, legal, and policy aspects of cybersecurity risk management and information privacy.

The Center for Intellectual Property Research trains students who are passionate about innovation and creativity and who seek an intensive experience in IP law — patent, trademark and unfair competition, copyright, design, and information policy.

Indiana University is one of the nation’s leaders in researching and teaching in this important field. The Maurer School of Law is one of three partners in an innovative program that focuses on the intersection of technology, business, and law. As an Indiana Law student, you can earn a combined JD/MS in Cybersecurity Risk Management,

The Center for Law, Society & Culture promotes and disseminates a multidisciplinary understanding

which offers a practical and interdisciplinary approach to addressing the varied legal, policy, business, and

of law through scholarship, teaching, and discussion. The Center produces, presents, and coordinates

ethical questions that permeate this growing field.

research conducted by exceptional scholars in schools and departments across Indiana University on law and legal problems.

In addition to the usual law school classes, the combined degree includes courses at IU’s acclaimed School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering and the #10-ranked Kelley School of Business. The joint degree can be completed in as few as three years. Certificates in Cybersecurity Law and Policy or Information Privacy Law and Policy are also available upon completion of at least 12 credit hours of applicable coursework. A JD/MS in Cybersecurity Risk Management can prove to be a wise investment: The shortfall in the cybersecurity workforce now exceeds one million, and this degree had the largest number of graduates of all of our dual degree programs in 2019. The Maurer School of Law is an ideal choice for acquiring the skills and talents to succeed in this essential element of global law and policy.

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: HAMILTON LUGAR SCHOOL OF GLOBAL AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES, KELLEY SCHOOL OF BUSINESS, AND O’NEILL SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS

LUDDY HALL

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EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING

Clinics

As one of the earliest schools to adopt an aspirational pro bono service goal for its students, Indiana Law’s

Community Legal Clinic: Work with local residents

pro bono and clinical programs combine to provide

whose incomes generally prevent them from hiring

the most extensive network of community legal sup-

lawyers for civil cases, including divorce, guardian-

port in south-central Indiana. In a typical year, our

ships, adoption, and custody. The clinic also assists

roughly 500 students log more than 65,000 hours of

individuals and disability rights groups with disabil-

legal service to local and nearby communities.

ity claims.

Pro bono projects

Conservation Law Clinic: Serve as an intern in the Conservation Law Center, Inc., a public-interest law

The Inmate Legal Assistance Project provides legal

firm, and work on actual matters for clients who need

counsel to inmates at the federal penitentiary in Terre

assistance with natural resource conservation issues.

Haute, Indiana.

Elmore Entrepreneurship Law Clinic: Help high-

The LGBT Project offers legal services on discrimi-

growth ventures become more operational and sus-

nation, legislation, and education matters on behalf

tainable as you earn your JD/MBA.

of LGBT advocacy organizations throughout the state.

Intellectual Property Law Clinic: Help clients pro-

The Pro Bono Immigration Project supports the un-

tect their investment in innovation through this

met legal needs of non-citizens in Bloomington and

hands-on clinic, certified by the US Patent and Trade-

surrounding areas.

mark Office for both patent and trademark law. The Protective Order Project helps victims of domesNon-Profit Law Clinic: Engage in public interest

tic abuse, sexual assault, and stalking obtain civil

lawyering through business and transactional work

protective orders, with the additional goal of prevent-

for non-profit organizations, including entity forma-

ing further abuse.

tion, contract drafting, basic tax advice, governance, The Tenant Assistance Project helps tenants who

and compliance.

face an immediate threat of eviction and educates Viola J. Taliaferro Family and Children

them about their legal rights.

Mediation Clinic: Mediate real-life disputes among The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Project pro-

families with children in family law cases while you

vides free income tax preparation services to qualify-

become a fully trained and registered domestic rela-

ing residents each year.

tions mediator.

The Will Preparation Project pairs law students with IU faculty and employees to offer this service at no charge in conjunction with the University Office of the Vice President and General Counsel.

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Externships

gram for you. You’ll spend half of your 3L year in Washington, DC, working in a federal agency, in Con-

Our externships offer you ways to earn academic

gress, or in a non-profit public advocacy organization,

credit while spending from one day a week to an entire

while you earn eight hours of credit. If you’d like to

semester working under the supervision of a trained

spend the summer in New York, we have a program

legal practitioner. Our externship opportunities can

that introduces you to numerous opportunities in the

be found throughout Indiana, in the nation’s capital,

public and private sectors there.

and many places around the globe. Student Legal Services: Earn credit while you work at Criminal Law: Gain a better understanding of the ma-

Student Legal Services, a nonprofit law office that pro-

jor issues involved with criminal law practice and the

vides legal services to Indiana University students

criminal justice system. In addition to legal research

and student groups.

and writing tasks, you’ll observe and participate in various criminal court proceedings under attorney

If none of these options meets your career objectives,

supervision. You will work in prosecutors’ and public

our faculty and advisers will work with you to develop

defenders’ offices in south central Indiana.

an independent clinical project.

Indiana Legal Services: Help elderly and low-income

Moot court and trial competitions

people in southern Indiana with legal problems affecting their access to basics such as food, shelter, in-

THE WINNERS AND JUDGES OF THE 2018 SHERMAN MINTON MOOT COURT COMPETITION

A lawyer’s role is, above all else, one of client advoca-

come, medical care, and personal safety.

cy. Whether representing clients in a corporate transIntellectual Property: Work with faculty in our

action, in tax planning, or in a courtroom trial, profi-

Center for IP Research to develop an on-site program

ciency as an advocate is essential. Indiana Law offers

tailored to your interests.

several opportunities for you to hone your skills as a litigator. Chief among these is our Sherman Minton

Judicial Field Placements: Spend a day every week

Moot Court Competition, where you can participate

in the chambers of a US District Court judge or mag-

in argument, legal representation, and jurisprudence

istrate judge in Indianapolis, where you’ll gain first-

by researching and writing an appellate brief and en-

hand experience from judges and their staff.

gaging in oral arguments. It is the school’s signature Public Interest: Our public interest externship pro-

student event, with nearly 75 percent participation.

gram gives you the opportunity to explore this popu-

Indiana Law alumni and other legal practitioners and

lar field while earning academic credit. About 30% of

judges from around the country serve as competition

Indiana Law’s students participate each summer.

judges. The competition is named for Hon. Sherman

Semester Public Interest (Washington, DC): If you

Minton, class of 1915, who served on the US Supreme

think you’d like to work on Capitol Hill — or represent

Court from 1949–1956.

people who do — or for the federal government or a public advocacy organization, this is a perfect pro-

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Other competitions include: – Law School Trial Competition

Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies

– Jessup International Moot Court

The Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies publishes

– National Cultural Heritage Law Moot Court

articles by distinguished legal scholars focusing on

– National Environmental Law Moot Court

globalization and international law. Each issue gener-

– Williams Institute Moot Court

ally contains articles by authors from many different

– International Transaction Drafting

countries. Students edit and proofread articles and

– Venture Capital Investment Competition

verify the accuracy and form of cited sources.

– Intellectual Property LawMeet

Law journals

Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality

As an Indiana Law student, you will be eligible to

The purpose of this journal is to serve as an interdis-

apply to one of our highly regarded law journals,

ciplinary academic forum for scholars, practitioners,

which will enable you to conduct and publish origi-

policy-makers, and students to contribute to society’s

nal legal research as well as edit work by prominent

understanding of legal and policy issues concerning

legal scholars.

race, religion, gender, and class.

Indiana Law Journal

IP Theory

The ILJ publishes original articles by a distinguished

IP Theory is a peer-edited, online intellectual proper-

and diverse selection of authors that have included

ty law publication hosted by the Law School’s Center

former United States Chief Justice William Rehnquist

for Intellectual Property Research. It is neither law

and US Solicitor General Seth Waxman. Students se-

journal nor blog; it is a different sort of publication

lect, edit, and verify the accuracy and form of cited

designed to occupy a niche between the two. IP Theo-

from during your law school years:

sources in the articles. The journal also publishes

ry serves as a forum for essays, book reviews, and re-

– How to negotiate a collective bargaining agreement — complete with going on strike

several student-written articles.

views of literature in IP and related fields.

HELPING INDIANA LAW STUDENTS BECOME PRACTICE-READY In addition to traditional doctrinal study, you’ll have the opportunity to learn the law in some unusual ways. Here are some examples of the practical experiences you can choose

and picketing your professor’s office

– How to take a deposition – How to become a certified domestic relations mediator – How to enter an appearance in a criminal law proceeding – How to run the operations of a successful small law firm – How to deliver service learning that will help local community organizations while

you study the fundamentals of civil procedure

Indiana Journal of Constitutional Design The Indiana Journal of Constitutional Design is the first journal devoted specifically to the emerging field of constitutional design. This new field examines the ways in which basic legal ordering

Many of these opportunities are available in our popular Wintersession course, a one-week, pass/fail intensive session for upper-division students offered free of charge just before the spring term begins. These are just a few ways in which Indiana Law integrates hands-on

shapes and is shaped by political, economic, and cultural conditions.

practice tips with rigorous analytical study.

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Every student’s experience at Indiana Law is bound to be dif-

> International Law Society

ferent, but there’s one common thread: a supportive, collegial

> Jewish Law Students Association

environment where students work together toward mutual

> Labor and Employment Law Society

success. From day one, our students realize that the people

> Latinx Law Student Association

sitting next to them in class will be their future colleagues

> Older and Wiser Law Students

(or opponents), and that it pays to treat them with dignity and

> OUTlaw

respect, just as any legal professional should.

> Outreach for Legal Literacy > Phi Alpha Delta

Because we are not an urban school with traffic and safety

> Phi Delta Phi

problems, students and faculty like to stay around after class,

> Public Interest Law Foundation

well into the afternoons and evenings. You’ll find them in

> Sports and Entertainment Law Society

the common areas of the library, along with the adjacent first

> Student Animal Legal Defense Fund

floor lobby of Baier Hall, which serve as the school’s Student

> Student Bar Association

Union. On Fridays, you will hear students from IU’s acclaimed

> Tax Law Society

Jacobs School of Music perform in the lobby during our lunch-

> Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program

time Live from Baier Hall series. The library is also where Dean

> Women’s Law Caucus

Parrish visits informally with students over coffee and cookies Student life extends well beyond the walls of Baier Hall. Our

every month.

student life

signature social event, the Rapheal M. Prevot, Jr. Barrister’s One hallmark of the Indiana Law community is our large num-

Ball, brings the community together for a formal evening out

ber of student organizations. Whether you are looking for net-

every spring. It is sponsored by our Black Law Students’ Associ-

working opportunities, ways to serve the community, or just a

ation, voted best chapter in the Midwest.

little fun and relaxation, you will find something of interest: In addition, the IU Bloomington campus presents a world of > Access to Justice

cultural and athletic opportunities, from Big Ten sports to

> Advocacy Board

opera and musicals. Biking, boating, hiking, and camping are

> Advocates for Life

just minutes away. And Indianapolis, with its trendy down-

> American Constitution Society

town and #15 restaurant-city ranking, is only an hour north of

> Asian Pacific American Law Student Association

campus. All of this is surprisingly affordable: You can live in

> Black Law Student Association

Bloomington for much less than other comparable cities and

> Business and Law Society

college towns.

> Christian Legal Society > Cybersecurity Law Association > Environmental Law Society > Family Law Society > Federalist Society > Feminist Law Forum > Health Law Society > If/When/How > Indianapolis Bar Association > Intellectual Property Association

OPPOSITE PAGE: STUDENTS AT THE LAW SCHOOL’S ANNUAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION FAIR.

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WELCOME TO BLOOMINGTON NESTLED IN THE ROLLING HILLS OF SOUTHERN INDIANA, BLOOMINGTON IS HOME TO 85,000 RESIDENTS AND SERVES AS A HOME AWAY FROM HOME FOR THOUSANDS OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY STUDENTS AND ALUMNI WHO CHERISH THE DYNAMIC ENERGY, SPECTACULAR SCENERY, WORLD-CLASS EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES, BIG TEN SPORTING EVENTS, THRIVING LOCAL BUSINESSES, VIBRANT ARTS SCENE AND UNIQUE SHOPPING AND DINING EXPERIENCES OFFERED THERE. BLOOMINGTON’S ADMITTEDLY UNIQUE CHARACTER WELCOMES ALL TO PARTICIPATE IN COMMUNITY BUILDING. OUR FRIENDLY, SAFE AND INVITING ENVIRONMENT EMBRACES VISITORS AND IDEAS FROM ACROSS THE GLOBE. BLOOMINGTON IS A CITY OF BOTH DREAMERS AND DOERS. COURTESY OF THE CITY OF BLOOMINGTON, BLOOMINGTON.IN.GOV.

Bloomington by the numbers

1

3

3

(Forbes)

campus (Condé Nast Traveler)

schools (The Daily Beast

#1 city for work-life balance

#3 most beautiful college

#3 the decade’s hottest (IU Bloomington))

6

6

24

(Business Insider)

forever (College Ranker)

(livability.com)

#6 best college town

#6 best college town to live in

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#24 best city for entrepreneurs

33


Cost of living index

OVERALL

(BLOOMINGTON = 100)

BLOOMINGTON

IOWA CITY

ATLANTA

CHICAGO

MADISON

MINNEAPOLIS

BOSTON

HOUSING

BLOOMINGTON

WASHINGTON, DC

BLOOMINGTON

IOWA CITY

ATLANTA

CHICAGO

MADISON

MINNEAPOLIS

BOSTON

WASHINGTON, DC

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one degree, a world of connections An Indiana Law degree is your point of entry to a ca-

various career-oriented programs all year long. If

reer with many options. Our alumni — whether five or

you’re leaning toward public service, our innovative

50 years out of school — bring honor and distinction

Washington, DC semester externship program offers

to the profession in many ways: as solo practitioners,

you course credit while you work in public service

corporate counsel, large-firm associates, judges, en-

and make connections for a full-time position after

trepreneurs, and in public service. More than two

earning your degree.

dozen of them serve on our Young Alumni Steering Many students aren’t sure about their career goals

Committee in 25 cities, ready to help you build your

when they start law school, and those goals can change.

network and get settled after you graduate.

For this reason, the Career Services Office offers You will meet many of our alumni while you’re still

unique career exploration trips. Every year, students

in school. More than 1,000 volunteer in other ways

visit law firms and public interest and government

in support of your success — as moot court judges,

organizations in Chicago, Washington, DC, and

adjunct professors, and speakers at various events

Indianapolis, where they engage in tours, network-

throughout the year. They also provide support as

ing, and panel discussions. Visits include elite firms

networking contacts and informal mentors.

in Chicago, every major firm in Indianapolis, and the Department of Justice and other federal agencies in

Our Career Services Office will be at your service

Washington. These exploration trips help students

during your time in Bloomington and beyond. A team

sharpen their career focus while getting acquainted

of professionals will help you analyze your options,

with potential employers.

perfect your résumé, and prepare for interviews. Every year more than 70 firms come to Bloomington

10,000+ 650,000+ 1,000+ 84.5% 62%

Law school alumni

Indiana University alumni

Annual volunteers

of class of 2018 employed 10 months after graduation 1

of class of 2018 employed in states outside Indiana

to interview from major cities, including Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, and St. Louis. We also conduct on-location recruiting with a dozen large firms in Chicago, and we can connect you with other employers throughout the country, in a variety of settings. You will also benefit from on-campus visits from alumni and other friends of the school through

1

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EMPLOYED IN LONG-TERM, FULL-TIME JD REQUIRED OR JD ADVANTAGE POSITIONS AS OF MARCH 15, 2019.


HERE ARE SOME OF THE FIRMS AND ORGANIZATIONS THAT RECRUIT OUR STUDENTS IN A TYPICAL YEAR:

Chicago on-location recruiting Baker McKenzie Banner & Witcoff Brannon Sowers & Cracraft Chapman & Cutler Chicago Transit Authority Cook County State's Attorney's Office Davis Wright Tremaine Drinker Biddle & Reath Dinsmore & Shohl Greenberg Traurig Hodges, Loizzi, Eisenhammer, Roddick & Kohn Illinois Attorney General’s Office Jones Day Latham & Watkins Locke Lord

Church Church Hittle & Antrim (Noblesville, Ind.)

Sebaly Shillito & Dyer (Dayton, Ohio)

Ohio Attorney General’s Office

Densborn Blachly (Indianapolis)

Segal McCambridge Singer & Mahoney (Chicago)

Northwest Immigrant Rights Project

Dinsmore & Shohl (Cincinnati)

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick (Toledo, Ohio)

Philadelphia District Attorney

Eichhorn & Eichhorn (Hammond, Ind.)

Smith Haughey Rice & Roegge (Grand Rapids, Mich.)

Prairie State Legal Services

Ernst & Young (Indianapolis)

Stites & Harbison (Lexington, Ky.)

Student Legal Services

Faegre Baker Daniels (Indianapolis)

Stoll Keenon Ogden (Lexington, Ky.)

Texas Attorney General

Farmer Scott Ozete Robinson & Schmitt (Evansville)

Stuart & Branigin (Lafayette, Ind.)

US Air Force JAG Corps

Fidelity National Title Group (Omaha)

Swanson Martin & Bell (Chicago)

US Army JAG Corps

Foster Swift Collins & Smith (Lansing, Mich.)

Taft Stettinius & Hollister (Indianapolis)

US Attorney’s Office

Fredrikson & Byron (Minneapolis)

Thompson Hine (Cleveland)

US Department of Justice

Frost Brown Todd (Cincinnati)

Warner Norcross & Judd (Grand Rapids and

US Department of Labor

Gahl Law (Zionsville, Ind.)

Gemondo & McQuiggan (Pittsburgh)

Wilkinson Goeller Modesitt Wilkinson & Drummy

Indiana Law sponsors students to participate in

Grant & Grant (Indianapolis)

the Equal Justice Works Job Fair and the Midwest Public

Gutwein Law (Indianapolis and Lafayette, Ind.)

Wooden McLaughlin (Indianapolis)

Hall Render Killian Heath & Lyman (Indianapolis)

Wyatt Tarrant & Combs (Louisville, Ky.)

HartBell (Vincennes, Ind.)

Mayer Brown

Ice Miller (Indianapolis) Jackson Kelly (Charleston, W. Va.)

ACLU

Kightlinger & Gray (Indianapolis)

Animal Legal Defense Fund

Knobbe Martens Olson & Bear (Irvine, Cal.)

Attorney General of Missouri

Krieg DeVault (Indianapolis)

Cook County State’s Attorney

Lewis Kappes (Indianapolis)

Decatur County (Ind.) Prosecutor’s Offics

Lewis Wagner (Indianapolis)

Indiana Attorney General

Mallor Grodner (Bloomington, Ind.)

Indiana Department of Child Services

May Oberfell Lorber (Mishawaka, Ind.)

Indiana Legal Services

Old National Bank (Evansville, Ind.)

Indiana University Office of General Counsel

Parr Richey Obremskey Frandsen & Patterson

Internal Revenue Service

(Indianapolis)

Lawrence County Prosecutor’s Office

Quarles & Brady (Indianapolis, Milwaukee, and Phoenix)

Legal Aid Society of Greater Cincinnati

Reminger (Columbus, Ohio and Indianapolis)

Legal Aid Society of Washington, DC

Riley Bennett Egloff (Indianapolis)

Legal Aid Society of Wisconsin

Rothberg Logan & Warsco (Fort Wayne, Ind.)

Marion County Prosecutor’s Office

Schiff Hardin (Chicago)

Marion County Public Defender

Schuckit & Associates (Zionsville, Ind.)

Monroe County Prosecutor’s Office

Scopelitis Garvin Light Hanson & Feary (Indianapolis)

Neighborhood Christian Legal Clinic

Hoover Hull Turner (Indianapolis)

Morgan Lewis & Bockius

Husch Blackwell (Kansas City and St. Louis, Mo.)

Nicolaides Fink Thorpe Michaelides Sullivan Reed Smith Schiff Hardin Swanson Martin & Bell

On-campus recruiting Armstrong Teasdale (St. Louis) Baker Hostetler (Cleveland) Barnes & Thornburg (Indianapolis and South Bend) Barrett McNagny (Fort Wayne, Ind.) Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff (Cleveland) Bingham Greenebaum Doll (Indianapolis) Bodman (Detroit) Brannon Sowers & Cracraft PC (Indianapolis) Brinks Gilson & Lione (Chicago) Bryan Cave (Chicago) Burke Costanza & Carberry (Merrillville, Ind.) Burke Warren MacKay & Serritella (Chicago) Calfee Halter & Griswold (Cleveland) Carson (Fort Wayne, Ind.)

38

(Terre Haute, Ind.)

Government and publicinterest organizations that have hired our graduates in recent years include:

Honigman Miller Schwartz & Cohn (Detroit)

McDermott Will & Emery

Lansing , Mich.)

Interest Conference and Career Fair.

WHERE IS THE CLASS OF 2018 WORKING?

57 % law firms

18% government 17 % business and industry 7 % clerkships

39


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join indiana law ALUMNI throughout the country

A VISIT TO INDIANA LAW ON THE IDYLLIC IU BLOOMINGTON CAMPUS IS THE BEST WAY TO FIND OUT WHAT MAKES OUR LAW SCHOOL ONE OF THE MOST IMPRESSIVE IN THE NATION. VISIT US DURING AN UPCOMING INFORMATION SESSION, OR SET UP AN INDIVIDUAL VISIT TO MEET OUR STUDENTS, ATTEND A CLASS, OR TAKE A TOUR OF THE LAW SCHOOL.

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In accordance with applicable state and federal laws and university policies, the Indiana University Maurer School of Law provides equality of opportunity for all persons, including faculty and employees, with respect to hiring, continuation, promotion and tenure, applicants for admission, enrolled students, and graduates, without discrimination or segregation, on the grounds of race, ethnicity, color, citizenship, national origin, religion, sex, sexual

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Baier Hall, 211 S. Indiana Ave., Bloomington, IN 47405 812-855-4765 lawadmis@indiana.edu @IUMaurerLaw Indiana University­–Maurer School of Law @IUMaurerLaw law.indiana.edu


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