Save the date of December 10-11, 2010 for the SALT Teaching Conference to be held at the William S. Richardson School of Law in Honolulu, Hawaii. The deadline for submitting proposals has been extended to March 15, 2010. Send proposals to Ngai Pindell at ngai.pindell@unlv.edu.
The conference's theme, Teaching in a Transformative Era: The Law School of the Future, will examine the most pressing challenges law schools face in the 21st century.
In the midst of the nation's worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, law schools must stay relevant and incorporate a curriculum that keeps pace with recent macroeconomic and social changes. Law professors nust address a new phase of corporate and collective responsibility as well as the increasing need for social and economic justice in struggling communities nationwide and across the globe.
Law schools must improve the admission and graduation of lawyers from a broad range of racial and ethnic backgrounds who will be prepared to serve their communities in the wake of the current global economic crisis. They must also address rising student indebtedness without sacrificing quality.
Since the conference coincides with the American Bar Association’s review of law school accreditation standards, it provides an opportunity to examine structural issues such as erosion of tenure, evolution in status relationships among law faculty, and the broader tensions between accreditation standards and economic and social trends in America.
Download a copy of the call for proposals, with a March 15, 2010 deadline for submission.
Download a pdf of the save the date flyer.