Rutgers School of Law-Newark is located on the Newark Campus of
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The campus is situated in
the heart of Newark's cultural center, close to the Newark Public
Library, the Newark Museum, and the New Jersey Performing Arts Center.
The social, cultural, professional, and educational opportunities of
the Newark/New York City area combine to provide a fitting location for
the study of law. Newark is the largest city in New Jersey and the
second largest in the New York metropolitan area, with a population of
approximately 275,000. It is eight miles west of New York City and 90 miles
northeast of Philadelphia.
Qualities that typify Rutgers School
of Law-Newark include its outstanding legal education, nationally
recognized faculty, very diverse student body, commitment to public
service, and reasonably-priced tuition. Of approximately 800 students in both
day and evening programs, about 40 percent are women and 41 percent are
students of color. The majority of students are New Jersey
residents, but students hail from all parts of the country and have
earned undergraduate degrees from more than 120 different colleges and
universities. The excellence and diversity of Rutgers School of
Law-Newark students is reflected in their varied professional
interests, goals, and outlooks, making classroom discussion and other
law school interactions dynamic and educationally stimulating. The
faculty is as diverse as the student body and brings to the classroom their experiences as nationally recognized experts in
a multitude of legal areas ranging from corporate law to public
interest law.
Faculty scholarship and extracurricular
service are well known and respected in the legal community, as well as
in the academic legal community. As a result, Rutgers School of Law-Newark
was awarded the first New Jersey chapter of the Order of the Coif, the
national honor society for law students.
The oldest law
school in the state, the School of Law-Newark has had many ancestors
and locales. It began in 1908 in an imposing Victorian town house as a
proprietary institution, the New Jersey Law School. Its
business-oriented curriculum quickly attracted many students, and by
the 1920s it had become the nation's second-largest law school. In
1927, it moved to a former brewery at 40 Rector Street. The school
joined in 1936 with another private institution, the Mercer Beasley Law
School, to become the University of Newark Law School.
In
1946, the entire University of Newark was absorbed by Rutgers
University, and Rutgers School of Law-Newark was officially born. The new
affiliation brought great advantages through the university's
substantial resources and prestige. Over the next several decades, the
school became an institution of national stature. Its library expanded
to become the most comprehensive collection in New Jersey, and its
faculty tripled in size. In the 1960s, the law school pioneered in
developing clinical education and in providing the opportunity to study
law to women and minority groups. In 1967, the School of Law in Camden,
which had been administered by the dean of the law school in Newark,
was created as a separate unit of the university, and the university's
original law school became the School of Law-Newark. After outgrowing
several buildings in downtown Newark, it moved in 1978 to the
skyscraper that became the S.I. Newhouse Center for Law and Justice. In
January 2000, the law school moved to the new
225,000-square-foot S.I. Newhouse Center for Law and Justice, located at the corner
of Washington and New Streets.