Admissions Admission to Northwestern Law is highly selective. For the class entering in the fall of 2024, 972 out of 6,327 (15.4%) were offered admission, with 242 matriculating. The 25th and 75th
LSAT percentiles for the 2024 entering class were 166 and 174, respectively, with a median of 172. The 25th and 75th undergraduate
GPA percentiles were 3.77 and 4.00, respectively, with a median of 3.95.
Costs The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, living expenses, books, and other miscellaneous expenses) at Northwestern Law for the 2022-2023 academic year is $104,564. The Law School Transparency estimated debt-financed cost of attendance for three years is $367,588.
Journals Northwestern Law sponsors seven student-run scholarly legal journals. Student staff members are selected based on a writing competition, editing competition, and first-year grades, or a publishable note or comment on a legal topic.
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business The
Journal of International Law and Business has a substantive focus on private international law, as opposed to public international law or human rights. It seeks scholarship analyzing transnational and international legal problems and their effect on private entities. The Journal's stated goal is to promote an understanding of the future course of international legal developments as they relate to private entities.
Northwestern University Law Review The
Northwestern University Law Review was first published in 1906 when it was called the "Illinois Law Review." Prior editors include:
Roscoe Pound, long-time dean of Harvard Law School; Judge
Robert A. Sprecher of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit; US Supreme Court Justice
John Paul Stevens; Dean James A. Rahl; Illinois Governor
Daniel Walker; and former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission
Newton N. Minow; US Supreme Court Justice
Arthur Goldberg and Presidential Candidate
Adlai Stevenson.
Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property The
Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property addresses subjects relating to law at the intersection of technology and
intellectual property, including law and biotechnology, copyrights, the Internet, media,
patents, telecommunications, and trademarks.
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology The School states that its
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology "is one of the most widely read and widely cited publications in the world". It is the second most widely subscribed journal published by any law school in the country.
Journal of Law and Social Policy The
Journal of Law and Social Policy is an interdisciplinary journal that explores the impact of the law on different aspects of society. Topics covered include race, gender, sexual orientation, housing, immigration, health care, juvenile justice, voting rights, family law, civil rights, poverty, the environment, and privacy rights.
Journal of Human Rights The
Journal of Human Rights is an interdisciplinary journal for the discussion of human rights issues and law.
Northwestern Law Journal des Refusés The
Northwestern Law Journal des Refusés is a "journal of law for legal rejects and the legal avant-garde" founded in 2022. It was inspired by the
Paris Salon des Refusés and aims to discuss legal issues in a way that is more accessible to the general public, as well as help readers trying to understand more difficult works. It publishes one print-issue each Spring and additional online articles throughout the year.
Clinics and centers Pritzker Legal Research Center The Pritzker Legal Research Center is the library, and fulfills the research and information needs of the faculty and students of Northwestern Law. The Center is named after the
Pritzker family, a philanthropic Chicago family.
Jay A. Pritzker (1922-1999) graduated from Northwestern University in 1941 and Northwestern University School of Law in 1947.
Bluhm Legal Clinic Clinical education at Northwestern dates back to the law school's beginnings. An innovative program developed by Dean
John Henry Wigmore in 1910 with the Chicago Legal Aid Society evolved into the Legal Clinic, which opened its doors in 1969 with only two staff attorneys. In 2000, the Clinic was named for Northwestern University trustee and alum
Neil Bluhm, a billionaire in
real estate and
casinos. Today, the Bluhm Legal Clinic houses around 20 clinics within 14 centers and is widely recognized as one of the most comprehensive and effective clinical programs in the country. Through the law school's clinical program, students gain direct experience representing clients and fine-tune their skills as advocates. They also work with clinical faculty and staff to challenge the fairness of our legal institutions and to propose solutions for reform. From 2000 to 2013, its director was
Steven Drizin.
Center on Wrongful Convictions The Center on Wrongful Convictions (CWC) is dedicated to identifying and rectifying wrongful convictions. The Center investigates possible wrongful convictions and represents imprisoned clients with claims of actual innocence. It also focuses on raising public awareness of the prevalence, causes, and social costs of wrongful convictions and promoting reform of the criminal justice system. In 2009, faculty member Prof
Steven Drizin co-founded a sister project to this Center, a
Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth, which was merged back into the main center after 2018.
Appellate Advocacy Center Established in 2006, the Appellate Advocacy Center includes the Federal Appellate Clinic and the Supreme Court Clinic, along with a moot program for practitioners. The Appellate Advocacy Center is directed by Xiao Wang. In the Federal Appellate Clinic, students research and brief cases in federal appellate courts across the country. In certain instances, where a case involves significant federal issues or interests, students will also participate in state appellate court work. Clinic cases generally focus on immigration,
qualified immunity, and criminal sentencing and post-conviction issues, although other topics and matters are covered as well. Where possible, Clinic students participate in oral argument before a
United States court of appeals. In the Supreme Court Clinic, students work with attorneys at
Sidley Austin to draft
certiorari, merits, and amicus briefs before the Supreme Court. Sidley attorneys Carter Phillips and Jeffrey Green co-direct the Supreme Court Clinic. The Clinic works on a variety of legal matters. During any given year, the Clinic will file briefs in cases concerning international law, tribal law, sentencing, criminal procedure, habeas, and the First Amendment. The Clinic frequently collaborates with state and federal public defenders. The Clinic also works with nonprofit organizations, including the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. In fall 2021, the Clinic partnered with Northwestern's Center for International Human Rights,
Amnesty International,
Global Justice Center, and
Human Rights Watch to file an amicus brief in ''
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization'', asserting that Mississippi's abortion ban was inconsistent with international law.
Children and Family Justice Center The Children and Family Justice Center represents young people on matters of delinquency and crime, family violence, school discipline, health and disability, and immigration and asylum. Attorneys, a social worker, and affiliated professionals help second- and third-year law students meet with clients, research legal issues, learn pretrial investigation, interviewing, and counseling skills, and litigate cases.
MacArthur Justice Center The MacArthur Justice Center focuses its work on police misconduct, wrongful detention compensation, post-9/11 work, and other public interest and civil rights issues. Of particular note is the Guantanamo Bay detainee representation led by
Joseph Margulies, author of
Guantanamo and the Abuse of Presidential Power and lead counsel in
Rasul v. Bush.
Donald Pritzker Entrepreneurship Law Center The Donald Pritzker Entrepreneurship Law Center (DPELC), founded as the Small Business Opportunity Center (SBOC), is a transactional clinic that was founded in 1998. Clients include technology executives, consultants, inventors, manufacturers and sellers of consumer products, musical groups, and persons interested in establishing nonprofit organizations. The Center is also heavily involved in teaching in the field of entrepreneurship law, and hosts symposia and conferences to facilitate that endeavor.
Center for International Human Rights The Center for International Human Rights works to advance human rights while enabling students to test and refine their academic learning in real cases. Stressing a comprehensive interdisciplinary approach, the center provides policy perspectives to the
United Nations, the
Organization of American States, the U.S.
Department of State, foreign governments, and nongovernmental organizations. Over the years faculty and staff working in the center have addressed, among other matters, the role of the
International Criminal Court, international terrorism, U.S. death penalty laws, truth commissions, economic rights,
NATO's humanitarian intervention, and political asylum cases. Students have investigated cases and had summer internships in
Guatemala,
Indonesia, and at the U.N. Human Rights Centre in Geneva. The Center also offers students an opportunity to earn an LLM in Human Rights. The degree program is designed for students from transitional democracies and for those with career interests in international human rights law.
Investor Protection Center The Investor Protection Center provides assistance to investors with limited income or small dollar claims who are unable to obtain legal representation. Law students, under the supervision of faculty attorneys, represent customers in handling their disputes with broker-dealers. During the last few years, the (
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority)(FINRA) and other organizations have taken steps to make more information and services available to investors. Northwestern Law's Investor Protection Center operates with the aid of grants from the FINRA Investor Education Foundation and other organizations to focus on priority areas. In particular, the Center is focused on helping to meet the needs of women, novice investors, and the elderly, in connection with securities arbitration.
Fred Bartlit Center for Trial Advocacy Named in honor of an innovative leader in litigation and business strategies, the Fred Bartlit Center for Trial Advocacy was established in 1999 to conduct research and teach innovative and technologically advanced trial strategy. The Bartlit Center focuses on changes in trial craft brought on by new technologies and compensation approaches. The Bartlit Center sponsors and conducts academic research on the litigation process; support teaching skills in the JD program; and holds national conferences to explore and teach innovative trial and trial management strategies. The Bartlit Center works to complement the law school's program in simulation-based teaching of trial skills and builds on the research produced by Northwestern Law faculty. ==Campus==