Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1992
Journal Title
University of Kansas Law Review
ISSN
0083-4025
Abstract
This Article explores the wisdom of imposing an internship requirement on aspiring lawyers as a prerequisite for licensure. It is my position that such a requirement can be beneficial to the new attorney, to the profession, and to the public and should thus be mandated for all those who seek admission to the practice of law. This Article begins by briefly examining the history in the United States of law-office, apprenticeship as a means of legal education. I then proceed to an examination of modern internship requirements in England and Canada. There follows a discussion of some of the more recent thinking on the issue of imposing such an internship requirement on would-be American lawyers. This Article concludes with a call for the imposition of a mandatory, one-year, postgraduate, prelicensure legal internship on all bar applicants and with some thoughts regarding its implementation. The Appendix to this Article surveys the contemporary American internship requirements in the professions of medicine, certified public accountancy, architecture, and psychology.
First Page
137
Last Page
167
Num Pages
31
Volume Number
41
Issue Number
1
Publisher
University of Kansas School of Law
Recommended Citation
Stephen R. Alton,
Mandatory Prelicensure Legal Internship: An Idea Whose Time Has Come Again,
41
U. Kan. L. Rev.
137
(1992).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.tamu.edu/facscholar/309