A pro bono life.

AuthorMcCarthy, Colman
PositionLaw school dean Barbara Bader Aldave

Long before I visited St. Mary's University Law School in San Antonio a few months back, I knew of its reputation for scrappiness. For nearly ten years, St. Mary's has been a haven for morality-based legal education. To this university, turning out attorneys is meaningless unless they have been exposed to the ideal of restorative justice and the practice of lawyering for clients the bar usually ignores. This isn't a hothouse school offering specialties in acquisition and merger law, boardroom law, or loophole law. It is--or was--one of the leading public-interest law schools in the country.

Founded in 1927 and currently serving 750 students, St. Mary's was headed, last fall, by Barbara Bader Aldave. Aldave was one of the few female law deans in America and the only one in the nine Texas law schools. After her 1989 appointment, she began to reshape an institution that had processed students as if they were slabs of cheese at Velveeta Law School hoping to make partner one day at Cheddar, Mozzarella, & Brie. She created the Center for Legal and Social Justice, a thriving enclave with five clinics and clients ranging from battered women to homeless immigrants.

All this broke with the school's conservative South Texas past, as did Aldave's decision to put in new courses in public-interest law, environment law, and alternative dispute resolution. The school also began to offer a course in capital-punishment law, with students doing pro bono work on Texas's death row--a busy place, since Texas leads the nation in state killings. Minority admissions rose. The year before Aldave's appointment, minority enrollment in the first-year class totaled 7.5 percent. By 1997, it had soared to 43 percent.

These changes did not go unnoticed. In 1997, the American Bar Association honored St. Mary's with its "Public Interest Law School of the Year" award. St. Mary's work also received awards from the Association of American Law Schools and the Clinical Legal Education Association. The Texas Observer said that St. Mary's clinical education program was "unparalleled in the state of Texas."

In a 1995 speech at Marquette University, Aldave reflected on her first five years: "While I was interviewing for the deanship, I was entirely honest about the changes I hoped to effect. The law school had been, by anyone's standards, a conservative institution. The curriculum was extremely limited, and most of the course of study was mandatory. In an area of the country in which Hispanics constitute the majority, the student body was almost exclusively white...

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