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Legal education in Alaska : ウィキペディア英語版 | Legal education in Alaska
Legal education in Alaska refers to the history of efforts to educate Alaskans in the laws of the state, including the education of those representing themselves before the courts, paralegals and the continuing legal education of Alaskan lawyers after their admission to the Alaska Bar Association. Since becoming the 49th state of the United States on January 3, 1959 Alaska has not had a public, American Bar Association-accredited law school. A 1975 study by former Alaska Attorney General (1970–1973) John E. Havelock concluded that the state did not require a law school. Without a state law school, Alaska did not receive a 2001 distribution of the complete legal papers of Abraham Lincoln and the ''Alaska Law Review'' has been published outside Alaska. As of 2013 Alaska was the only state without a law school, and Alaskans spent three years outside their home state to earn a law degree. A $1-million donation was made in 1999 to the Seattle University School of Law on behalf of Alaskan law students. In June 2013, the Seattle University School of Law announced that they would work with the University of Alaska Anchorage to develop an American Bar Association-accredited law program at the University of Alaska which would allow Seattle University School of Law students from Alaska to study law at the University of Alaska during summers and their third (and final) year of law school. By November 2013 the project had the support of the Alaska court system and Dana Fabe, a justice on the Alaska Supreme Court. ==History==
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Legal education in Alaska」の詳細全文を読む
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