Leadership in Legal Education - Issue IV
Volume 35 · Number 1 · Fall 2003
View table of contents or click below to read articles from this issue. The Leadership in Legal Education series is published by The University of Toledo Law Review. Visit the series list to explore more volumes.
The Dean and the Web: Charlotte's Web as a Dean's Parable
by Hannah R. Arterian
Leading Students to Distinguish Between Career and Vocation: Reflections from a Lutheran
Law School
by Steven C. Bahls
Budgets
by Patrick J. Borchers
The Student-Faculty Retreat
by Jeffrey A. Brauch
Part-time Legal Education: It's Not Your Parents' Old Oldsmobile
by Edwin J. Butterfoss
Law School Leviathan: Explaining Administrative Growth
by Ronald A. Cass and John H. Garvey
Ten Things Deans Can Do with Students
by R. Lawrence Dessem
Scholarship Rag
by Thomas C. Galligan Jr.
The Law School in and as Community
by Kristin Booth Glen
The Dean's Role as a Member of the University's Central Administration
by Janice C. Griffith
Faculty Governance — Reflections of a Retiring Dean
by Harry J. Haynsworth
From Admiral to Dean
by John D. Hutson
What Is a Dean For?
by Robert Gilbert Johnston
Interloper in the Fields of Academe
by Peter Keane
Leadership
by Don LeDuc
Who Moved Your Cheese? Confessions of a Rat
by Richardson R. Lynn
Contending with a Merger
by Philip J. McConnaughay
What's Faith Got To Do With It? (With Apologies to Tina Turner)
by Thomas M. Mengler
Harry Truman and the Joy of Deaning
by Daniel J. Morrissey
Admissions after Grutter
by Jerry R. Parkinson
"Venn" and the Art of Shared Governance
by Nancy B. Rapoport
W&M Law School Came First. Why Care?
by W. Taylor Reveley III
Resigning as Dean: Stepping Down or Stepping Up?
by David E. Shipley
I Apologize for this Essay
by Glen Weissenberger
Staff Matter(s)
by Darby Dickerson
A Parable of Law School Leadership
by Kent D. Syverud