Associate Clinical Professor of Law and Codirector of
the Children's Justice Clinic. Professor Lore received his J.D.
from Northwestern University School of Law and a B.A. from the Richard Stockton
College of New Jersey, where he graduated with highest honors and program
distinction. Prior to joining the faculty at Rutgers, Professor Lore was the acting director
of the Farmworker Legal Aid Clinic at Villanova University School of Law, where
he also was a Reuschlein fellow. Professor Lore has served as a staff attorney at the Northwestern
University School of Law Bluhm Legal Clinic and taught trial advocacy in their
nationally recognized trial advocacy program. While at the Bluhm Legal Clinic,
he coordinated the Children's Law Pro
Bono Project, which involved the recruitment, training, and supervising of
more than 200 law firm attorneys who represented children in juvenile
court. Additionally, he represented
children in the areas of delinquency, criminal, dependency, school suspension
and expulsion, guardianship, Supplemental Security Income appeals, orders of
protection, and immigration matters. Professor Lore is a faculty member of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy
(NITA), where he teaches and trains young lawyers in both basic and advanced
trial advocacy skills throughout the country. Prior to pursuing his teaching career, Professor Lore worked as an assistant public defender at the Defender Association of Philadelphia, where he was a
member of the felony trial unit, and as an assistant public defender at the Cook
County Public Defender's Office in Chicago, where he represented both parents
and children in abuse and neglect proceedings as well as criminal court. Professor Lore's scholarship is focused in the area of juvenile rights.