UH Law Tops Nation’s Law Schools As the No. 1 for Asian Students in Spring PreLaw Magazine survey And Earns a Grade ‘A’ for International Law | William S. Richardson School of Law

UH Law Tops Nation’s Law Schools As the No. 1 for Asian Students in Spring PreLaw Magazine survey And Earns a Grade ‘A’ for International Law

March 28, 2021

Law graduates at the 2019 ceremony before COVID-19: Kaitlyn Iwashita of Waipi‘o, O‘ahu, and Cheyne Yonemori of Hilo, after the Andrews Amphitheater graduation ceremony.
 

The UH Law School again tops the nation as the best law school for Asian students in the new survey released in the Spring 2021 issue of prelaw magazine.

 

The magazine ranked the top 25 law schools in the nation, with the William S. Richardson School of Law continuing to lead the country, with 50.1% of its students identifying as either Asian or Native Hawaiian.

 

Additionally, 41.7 % of the faculty are identified as being members of a minority group.

 

PreLaw’s methodology included: grading schools based on the percentage of students in each ethnic group (50% of score); the percentage of minority professors (25% of score); and diversity services offered by the school (25% of score.)

 

Law Dean Camille Nelson noted that Richardson’s diversity is an important strength, bringing together students with a rich array of backgrounds, interests and perspectives.

 

Our diversity is intrinsic to our excellence,” said Nelson. “We welcome the recognition of the diverse and inclusive excellence that makes Richardson Law a special place to learn to be a legal professional ready for the world’s opportunities and challenges.”

 

In the same spring issue, Richardson Law School earned an ‘A’ grade for its International law program, and was listed as one of the top 25 law schools for all clerkships, with 23.2% of its graduates finding clerkships.

 

Richardson was among 13 schools earning As for international law, among a group of schools that included Cardozo School of Law, Duke University, Fordham University and the University of Michigan.

 

Meanwhile, the clerkship record puts Richardson 17th among an equally powerful list of schools whose students serve in the judiciary after graduation. The list included such schools as Stanford Law School, the University of Chicago, the University of Maryland, and Rutgers Law.

 

“Clerkships are prestigious, and they help graduates learn the inner workings of the judicial bench,” points out the magazine article. “Students get hands-on experience with all the players in the courts, including judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, trial litigators, and support staff. Plus, there’s the research, the writing, and the focus on how the court process is managed.”