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Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley founded Seton Hall University in 1856.
He named the University after his aunt, Sister Elizabeth
Ann Seton, the first American-born saint. Today, a total of more than
10,000 students attend Seton Hall's eight schools and colleges on the
University's South Orange campus and the School of Law in Newark.
As early as 1937, a law school had been planned as part of Seton Hall
University. But the demands of both the war years and the post-war
influx of returning GIs delayed establishment of the law school until 1950.
At that time, the New Jersey Supreme Court had adopted
rules requiring candidates for bar admission to hold law degrees
from law schools accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA).
As a result, John Marshall Law School in Jersey City, New
Jersey was forced to close. In June 1950, the administration of
John Marshall gave its library and many of its assets to Seton
Hall. In return, Seton Hall agreed to maintain and administer the
records of John Marshall's graduates.
The following month, Miriam T. Rooney, then professor and chief
librarian of Catholic University Law School was engaged to develop
plans for the Seton Hall Law School. Over the course of the year,
Rooney developed a curriculum
and hired a staff. She
then obtained provisional approval from the New Jersey Supreme
Court and recruited an entering class. On February 5, 1951, Seton
Hall University School of Law opened on the old John Marshall
site, 40 Journal Square, Jersey City with an entering class of
72 students, 16 full-time and 56
part-time faculty members.
With this, Rooney became the first woman law school dean in the history
of American legal education. Under Dean Rooney's stewardship,
the first decade of Seton
Hall Law School's existence was one of substantial growth.
In September 1951, the law school moved from Jersey City to
Newark, and in 1954, graduated its first class.
The
following year, full ABA accreditation was granted; and in 1959,
the law school became a member of the Association of American Law
Schools (AALS). As
the law school's enrollment grew to more than 300 students, Dean
Rooney worked tirelessly to build the library collection and to
upgrade faculty salaries. In
the summer of 1961, when Dean Rooney returned to teaching full
time, John P. Loftus succeeded her.
During
Dean Loftus' tenure, the law school's student body expanded to
nearly 1,000 students. The
students worked together to establish the Student Bar Association,
the Law Review and the student newspaper, Res Ipsa Loquitur.
When Dean Loftus retired in August 1971, John F.X. Irving was hired
with a mandate to move forward in building better physical
facilities and further expanding the faculty. Under his able leadership,
the law school moved to 1010
Raymond Boulevard and the number of faculty members nearly
tripled. In the fall
of 1978, Reverend Daniel A. Degnan succeeded Dean Irving.
Dean Degnan placed particular emphasis on alumni relations,
establishing the Alumni Office and the Alumni Council. When Dean Degnan's
successful tenure ended in June 1983, he
was succeeded by Elizabeth F. Defeis. Under the strong leadership of
Dean Defeis, who served until June 1987, the law school's scholarly
reputation in the world of legal academia grew along with the law school itself.
The
physical plant finally proved to be inadequate for a law school of
Seton Hall's size. In July 1988 when Dean Ronald J. Riccio took the helm,
he assumed the
mammoth task for arranging for financing and beginning
construction of the magnificent $37 million facility located in
the heart of Newark's business district which is home to Seton
Hall Law School today. At
a time when other organizations and businesses were leaving
Newark, Seton Hall Law School is proud to have remained, playing a
vital role in the Newark renaissance while becoming recognized as
one of the finest law schools in the country.
During
Dean Riccio's tenure, the law school achieved national recognition
in a number of areas. It
was ranked first in the New York/New Jersey metropolitan area and
second in the nation for student satisfaction in a survey
conducted by the Princeton Review. The National Jurist, a popular student
magazine, ranked
Seton Hall 37th overall and second in judicial clerkship placement
among the nation's ABA-approved law schools. Many innovative programs
were initiated at Seton Hall Law
School, including a nationally acclaimed Health Law & Policy
Program. The program
offers a Master of Law (LL.M.) degree as well as a Master of
Science in Jurisprudence (M.S.J.) for a wide variety of
professionals working in the health care, pharmaceutical or
biotechnology industries. Seton Hall Law School’s M.S.J. degree program
is one of
just two in the country and the only such program in the
Northeast. It is, in
part, because of Seton Hall’s solid reputation in health law
that the New Jersey State Legislature recently chose the Law
School as the site for a new Institute for Law and Mental Health
designed to research and address current public policy issues.
When
Dean Riccio stepped down in 1999, Dean Patrick E. Hobbs stepped up
to the plate, building on a solid foundation and setting a course
for recognition among the nation’s top Catholic law schools.
Seton Hall Law School joined forces with the Seton Hall University
School of Diplomacy & International Relations in South Orange
to offer a dual degree, the Juris Doctor/Master of Arts in
Diplomacy & International Relations (JD/MADIR). Seton Hall Law
School’s nationally ranked Health Law & Policy Program now
offers two new health law graduate programs -- an MD/MSJ (Doctor
of Medicine/Master of Science in Jurisprudence) and an MD/JD
(Doctor of Medicine/Juris Doctor). Both programs are offered in
combination with the
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey – Robert Wood
Johnson Medical School, making it possible for students to earn
both a JD and an MD degree in six years or an MSJ and an MD degree
in five years.
At
the start of the 2000-2001 academic year, Seton
Hall Law School established the Institute for Law, Science &
Technology. Designed to train the next generation of lawyers for
the complex legal issues they will face in the Digital Information
Age, the Institute also will provide continuing legal education,
resources, and support to assist the growing technology and
science communities in New Jersey, the nation and the global
community. Through
the university’s talented faculty and alumni together with
industry leaders, scientists, judges, and policy makers, the
Institute has become a forum for addressing the legal, political
and social problems that arise as scientific and technological
changes seemingly outstrip existing laws, rules, and norms on a
daily basis. In 2001, the M.S. J. degree in Health Law was expanded to include
tracks in science and technology. In
2002, Seton Hall Law School partnered with New Jersey Institute of
Technology to offer a combined educational program whereby
students earn a bachelor’s degree and a J.D. in six years
instead of the traditional seven.
Seton
Hall Law School is widely known and respected at home and abroad.
The Law School offers a student pro
bono initiative through its Center for Social Justice that
provides legal services for more than 1,000 Newark citizens every
year. The Center
offers housing, immigration/human rights, consumer law and
juvenile justice clinics that help clients with a wide range of
problems from domestic violence to the threat of deportation.
In
addition to offering international programs in Egypt and Italy,
Seton Hall Law School also participates in the Dean Acheson Legal
Stage Program at the Court of Justice of the European Communities
in Luxembourg. Over the past several years, Seton Hall Law School
students have competed successfully against their peers from
Columbia, Fordham, Georgetown, Harvard and New York University to
secure prestigious positions with European Court justices.
Finally, the Law School boasts a highly respected
inter-scholastic moot court curriculum among its many programs
designed to attract and train some of the best legal minds in the
country. |