UC Davis School of Law


The University of California, Davis School of Law is the professional graduate law school of the University of California, Davis. The school received ABA approval in 1968. It joined the Association of American Law Schools in 1968.
UC Davis School of Law is one of five law schools in the University of California system, with a total enrollment of around 600 students. The school is located in a building named for Dr. Martin [Luther King Jr.], and commonly referred to as King Hall.

History

In July 1962, the Regents of the University of California approved a plan for a law school at the University of California, Davis. Edward L. Barrett, Jr., was appointed as UC Davis Law's first dean on July 1, 1964.
Barrett hired Mortimer Schwartz as the first law librarian, so that a law library could be established right away, and for the founding faculty, hired Daniel Dykstra, Edgar Bodenheimer, Brigitte Bodenheimer, Edward Rabin, and Frank Baldwin.
UC Davis School of Law opened in a temporary space in fall 1966 and moved to a permanent building in fall 1968. For its first entering class in fall 1966, the new law school received 340 applications, accepted 150, enrolled 78, and awarded 68 J.D. degrees in June 1969.
The assassination of [Martin Luther King Jr.] on April 4, 1968 caused several students and faculty members to suggest renaming the law school after him. Instead, the building housing the law school was formally dedicated as Martin Luther King Jr. Hall on April 12, 1969. The featured speaker was Chief Justice Earl Warren.

Rankings and academics

In 2025, U.S. News & World Report ranked UC Davis 50th among all law schools in the United States.
For diversity among the five law schools in the UC system, UC Davis was named the second-most diverse after UC Hastings by U.S. News & World Report. Princeton Review placed UC Davis Law tenth in the nation for faculty diversity in the 2009 version of its annual law ranking. It is listed as an "A−" in the March 2011 "Diversity Honor Roll" by The National Jurist: The Magazine for Law Students.
It is listed as an "A" in the January 2011 "Best Public Interest Law Schools" ratings by The National Jurist: The Magazine for Law Students.
UC Davis has been ranked as the fifth most-expensive public law school in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. It is also ranked first for providing the most financial aid.
UC Davis grants the second-most in financial aid in the country. UC Davis Law's King Hall Loan Repayment Assistance Program, founded in 1990 to help alumni working in relatively low-income public-service law careers to repay student loans, was the first loan repayment assistance program established at any UC law school.
According to Brian Leiter's Law School rankings, Davis ranks 18th in the nation for scholarly impact as measured by total academic citations of tenure-stream faculty.

Bar passage rates

Based on a 2001-2007 6 year average, 79.4% of UC Davis Law graduates passed the California State Bar exam. In 2009, 89% of first-time test takers passed the California bar.
For July 2012, 78.9% of first-time test takers passed the California bar exam. For July 2013, 85.0% of first-time test takers passed the California Bar Exam.
For July 2014, 86% of first-time test takers passed the California bar exam.

Employment

According to King Hall's official 2019 ABA-required disclosures, 85% of the Class of 2019 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation. King Hall's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 6.5%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2019 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.

Costs

The total cost of attendance at King Hall for the 2024-2025 academic year is $83,011 for California residents and $95,256 for non-residents.

Expansion

The law school completed a $30 million expansion project in 2011. The project has added an additional wing to the law school's current building, increasing assignable space by nearly 30 percent to provide for additional classrooms, offices, and a new courtroom, named the Paul and Lydia Kalmanovitz Appellate Courtroom in honor of a $1 million gift to the project from the Kalmanovitz Charitable Foundation. The courtroom is used by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, California Supreme Court, and California Court of Appeal.

Noted people

Faculty

Alumni