Skip Navigation

Archive-It

Facebook iconTwitter iconWordpress icon

Stanford Law School Student Organizations

Collected by: Stanford Law Library

Archived since: Aug, 2019

Description:

Stanford Law School has an active student life with a host of varied student run organizations and journals. This collection captures the various different student organizations’ webpage. All student groups fall under the jurisdiction of the Office of Student Affairs. Depending on the student organization, receive some financial support from Office of Student. For a Student Organization to be officially recognized and access to some of that funding, all student group must applied. The requirements are that a new student organization must not overlap with an already existing group, to have at least 12 members, and a written proposal that outlines their mission, group actives, and proposed budget. Any student organization must meet the requirements and limitations outlined in the Handbook for Student Organizations. After gaining written approval from the Office of Student Affairs. The nascent student organization is then able to elect their executive board, which allows the group to start organizing and hosting events, speakers, and programs at Stanford Law School. This collection is organized by student organization in alphabetical order.

Subject:   Universities & Libraries Arts & Humanities

Narrow Your Results

There are no further ways to narrow your results.

Page 1 of 1 (1 Total Results)

Title: Stanford Critical Law Society (SCritLS)

URL: https://law.stanford.edu/stanford-critical-law-society-scritls/

Description: The Stanford Critical Law Society (SCritLS) is a community of Stanford students for whom social justice is an important component of their legal education. We seek to foster student discussion on the interaction between law and race, gender, class and sexual orientation among other topics. The mission of the organization is to create a safe space where students can address these topics and collectively engage in societal and institutional critique.

Loading Wayback Capture Info...

Loading video data...

Page 1 of 1 (1 Total Results)