University of Virginia School of Law
The University of Virginia School of Law is the law school of the University of Virginia, a public research university in Charlottesville, Virginia.
The law school was founded by Thomas Jefferson in 1819 as part of his "academical village", now a UNESCO World Heritage site. Each class in the three-year J.D. programme contains approximately 300 students. The school also offers LL.M., and S.J.D. degrees in law and hosts visiting scholars, visiting researchers and a number of legal research centers.
Notable distinguished alumni include members of the U.S. Supreme Court, several of the Kennedy brothers, including Robert F. Kennedy, numerous members of both houses of U.S. Congress, twelve governors of Virginia, and judges on federal courts throughout the United States. The school has over 20,000 alumni in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and 64 foreign countries.
Founding
Admissions
For the class entering in the fall of 2023, 305 out of 5,610 J.D. applicants matriculated. The 25th and 75th LSAT percentiles for the 2023 entering class were 167 and 172, respectively, with a median of 171. The 25th and 75th undergraduate GPA percentiles were 3.72 and 3.99, respectively, with a median of 3.94. The Class of 2026 consists of students from 40 states and the District of Columbia and from 144 undergraduate institutions. The age range was 20 to 34, with the average age of 24. 53.1% of the class was female, 46.6% male, and 36.1% identified themselves as people of color. 74% of the class had postgraduate experience.The LL.M. Program admits around 40-50 students each year. It provides an American legal education to lawyers who have obtained their first law degree in their home countries; LL.M. candidates take classes alongside J.D. students, allowing participants to fully engage in the community and plan their own coursework
The S.J.D. Program has about 8 candidates, and it is intended primarily for aspiring legal academics.
Cost of attendance
The total cost of attendance for first-year law students at UVA Law for the 2024–2025 academic year is $105,334 for Virginia residents and $108,348 for nonresidents. Law School Transparency has estimated that the debt-financed cost of attendance for three years, based on data from the 2019–2020 academic year, is $304,672 for residents; the estimated cost for non-residents is $314,961.Campus
UVA Law receives no funding from the state; instead, the school depends upon the generosity of private donors, its substantial endowment, the 5th largest among all law schools, and student tuition payments. In 1995–1997, UVA Law used entirely donated funds to renovate and expand its buildings on the university's North Grounds to include the former facilities of the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, which built a new campus several hundred yards away.The Arthur J. Morris Law Library holds more than 820,000 volumes, including substantial collections of federal, state, and international documents, manuscripts, archives, and online research databases.
Student organizations
UVA Law maintains an extensive roster of student organizations, including chapters of the Federalist Society, the American Constitution Society and the St. Thomas More Society. The Virginia Law Weekly, UVA Law's student-run weekly newspaper, has been published since 1948. The paper has been cited in several court cases, including in the dissenting opinion of Justice Powell in the U.S. Supreme Court case Patterson v. New York. In addition to its news content, the VLW also contains student-submitted content, which often includes humorous and creative pieces. The Law Weekly has won the American Bar Association's previous three "Best Newspaper Awards", in 2006, 2007, and 2008.Each spring, over one hundred students write, direct and perform in The Libel Show, a comedy and musical theater production that was first organized in 1904. Its performers roast law school professors, student stereotypes and life in Charlottesville throughout each of its three nightly showings. Professors write and sing their response to the students' jokes at the opening-night performance.
The school hosts an annual softball tournament to raise money for ReadyKids, an organization that provides care and counseling for at-risk families in Central Virginia, and the Public Interest Law Association, which provides public service internships for law students. 51 different law schools send teams to compete in men's and co-rec brackets. In 2017, $25,000 was raised.
Law journals
UVA Law hosts 10 academic journals, including the Virginia Law Review, one of the most cited law journals in the country.- Virginia Journal of International Law, the oldest student-edited international law journal in the country
- Virginia Environmental Law Journal
- Virginia Journal of Law & Technology
- Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law
- Virginia Law & Business Review
- Virginia Law Review
- Virginia Sports & Entertainment Law Journal
- Virginia Tax Review
- Virginia Journal of Criminal Law
- ''Journal of Law and Politics''
Academics
Clinics
Among the more than 250 courses and seminars offered each year, UVA Law has 23 clinics:- Appellate Litigation
- Civil Rights
- Community Solutions
- Criminal Defense
- Decarceration and Community Reentry
- Economic and Consumer Justice
- Employment Law
- Entrepreneurial Law
- Environmental Law and Community Engagement
- Federal Criminal Sentence Reduction
- First Amendment Law
- Health and Disability Law
- Holistic Juvenile Defense
- Immigration Law
- Innocence Project
- International Human Rights
- Litigation and Housing Law
- Nonprofit
- Patent and Licensing
- Project for Informed Reform
- Prosecution
- State and Local Government Policy
- Supreme Court Litigation
- Youth Advocacy
Study abroad
Institutes and centers
UVA Law includes several internationally known special programs and centers directed by faculty members.- The John W. Glynn, Jr. Law & Business Program
- Program in Law and Public Service
- Center for International & Comparative Law
- Program on Constitutional Law and Legal History
- Center for Criminal Justice
- Karsh Center for Law and Democracy
- Virginia Center for Tax Law
- PLACE: Program in Law, Communities and the Environment
- National Security Law Center
- LawTech Center
- Center for the Study of Race and Law
- Health Law
- Human Rights Program
- Center for Public Law and Political Economy
- First Amendment Center
- Family Law Center
- Center for Law & Philosophy
- Intellectual Property
- Immigration Law
- Public Policy and Regulation
- Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy
- John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics
- Animal Law Program
Rankings