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Rich Law
Schools Getting Richer
By Leigh Jones
The National Law Journal
New York Lawyer
January 29, 2008
Top law schools are reporting record-breaking donations that are
helping to cover tuition costs, hire faculty and promote public
interest programs. But in the world of fundraising, apparently it's
never enough.
Last year alone, Harvard
Law School brought in $48 million in cash. New York University
School of Law raised about $42 million and Columbia Law School raked
in almost $24 million. Those numbers excluded promises from donors
of money yet to come, which amounted to millions more.
A look at some of the
nation's elite law schools during the past five years shows huge
amounts of money that they have coaxed from alums and businesses.
Rocketing costs,
competition for top faculty and additional pressures to train
practice-ready graduates will take every penny, according to most
deans. But others question whether there is too much fat in the
system.
"Money is like fuel," said
Columbia Law School Dean David Schizer. "A school can go higher and
higher with more fuel."
Since 2003, his school has
received cash donations totaling nearly $100 million. The money has
enabled the school to create seven new faculty positions, add a
floor to its main building and provide more loan forgiveness to
students pursuing public interest jobs after graduation, said
Schizer, who became dean in 2004.
Columbia Law School, with
about 1,200 students, has a $117 million annual budget. Tuition at
the school is $41,226 a year. Like other schools, it has tapped into
an ever-enlarging alumni base to boost donations. Three out of four
graduates make donations to the school, he said.
Columbia is one of several
elite law schools buoyed by recent huge gifts. Harvard, the king of
the fundraisers, has received $214.9 million in donations in the
past five years. New York University School of Law has collected
$169.7 million since 2003 and Yale Law School, with a student body
much smaller than its competitors, has garnered $111.7 million in
five years.
In general, those schools
and others have increased the numbers of specialized faculty,
especially scholars with an international focus, and have boosted
the number of scholarships available. They also have established
legal clinics to provide students with practical experience and to
help poor people in their communities who need legal help.
In addition, more money has
sparked a talent war among elite schools, with renowned professors
hopscotching from Columbia to New York University to Harvard to Yale
and back again, sometimes with attractive relocation packages.
All that money also likely
has enabled those schools to remain at the top of the U.S. News &
World Report rankings, the annual publication both revered and
reviled by law schools. More money means lower student-faculty
ratios, better facilities and the ability to give scholarships to
applicants with high admission test scores. All of those factors
contribute to a school's ranking by the publication.
While those factors indeed
may improve education, the influence of the rankings also can have
perverse financial results, said Evan Caminker, dean of the
University of Michigan Law School.
Because part of a law
school's ranking depends upon how much it spends on each student, it
can be penalized for running a tight ship, he said. The upshot is
that schools may not spend dollars received, whether from donations
or tuition, as wisely as they could.
"It puts pressure on
schools not to become efficient," he said, adding that raising
expenditures per student can serve as "a really convenient excuse"
for schools to call for more money.
The University of Michigan
Law School has gathered its own handsome sum of donations recently.
Since 2003, the amounts received have climbed nearly threefold. Five
years ago, it brought in $6 million. In 2007, the school raised
$17.8 in cash. Like many other public law schools, it is receiving
less and less of its funding from state sources. The school now gets
about 2% of its annual $67 million budget from public funding,
Caminker said. It has 1,130 students and charges $38,502 for
nonresident tuition.
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