The Massachusetts School of Law is accredited by the
New England Commission of Higher Education. It is currently unaccredited by the
American Bar Association. In 1990, the Massachusetts Board of Regents of Higher Education authorized MSLAW to grant the
Juris Doctor degree. MSLAW subsequently applied for American Bar Association approval while filing an action in Federal Court in Philadelphia challenging some of the ABA's accreditation standards, arguing that those standards are of questionable educational value, violate
antitrust laws, and needlessly increase
tuition costs. MSLAW refused to comply with these standards, and the ABA refused to approve the school. As a result of its actions the MSLAW and the
Department of Justice filed complaints against the ABA for antitrust violations. The summary judgment dismissing the MSLAW complaint on immunity grounds was granted to the ABA at the trial level and affirmed by the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. The case brought by DOJ was later settled by way of a consent decree between the ABA and the United States Department of Justice in which the ABA agreed to modify its accreditation process and eliminate some of its law school accreditation standards that violated antitrust laws and were outdated. The school continues to criticize ABA standards that it fails to meet, and encourage the
Department of Education to strip the ABA of its authority over other law schools. ==Admission and academics==