Yale Daily News

At Yale Law, a faculty exodus or just a cycle?

This story is the first installment of a three-part series on Yale Law School.

A recent spate of high-profile departures from Yale Law School’s faculty has raised concerns among students and legal academics about the school’s future.

In just over a year, six big-name law professors have left or have said they will leave: Anne Alstott LAW ’87, Yochai Benkler and Henry Smith LAW ’96 to Harvard; Brett Dignam and Michael Graetz to Columbia; and Kenji Yoshino LAW ’96 to New York University.

As many as four more could follow, sources said.

It’s an unprecedented loss for such a small faculty in such a short period of time. Among the more than 30 professors and students interviewed, the degree of alarm varied. But, by consensus, retention is a serious challenge, if not yet a serious problem.

“Some people are like, ‘Oh my god, we’re bleeding professors,’” Elizabeth Pesses LAW ’10 said.

It’s become the talk of the elite legal academy. Some circulation among law professors is natural, Stanford law professor Mark Lemley said. But Yale’s recent departures, he said, have left a hole in its faculty.

Even if the answer hasn’t changed, a question that years ago would have been greeted as preposterous is now asked increasingly often and in some unlikely corners.

Is Yale Law School slipping?

Location, Location, Location

The school’s dean, Harold Hongju Koh, said these kinds of concerns tend to arise from time to time and, in turn, subside.

“Schools go through cycles,” he said in an interview. “There are periods of a lot of comings, and there are periods of transition.”

But others said the current challenges facing the Law School may not be cyclical, and may be the beginning of a trend. The biggest challenge, sources agreed, in attracting and retaining professors today: location, location, location.

Perhaps New Haven has never been a terribly alluring place to call home. But the problem has worsened recently because with more and more couples, both spouses now have active professional lives, said professor Alec Stone Sweet, who has a joint appointment in the Law School and the Political Science Department.

When that’s the case, it can be harder for both partners to find career fulfillment in New Haven, a city with fewer opportunities than, say, New York or Boston.

“If you’re an excellent school located in a university town, in a two-career-couple world, it’s going to be increasingly difficult to make Yale — or any other university — as appealing as it was in an era when one spouse had a primary career and the other was willing to relocate with that person,” Yoshino said.

Yoshino moved to NYU after concluding that he could no longer make his commute from Manhattan work. If he could have, he would have stayed “in a heartbeat,” he said.

“My concern here is that this will be read as some kind of criticism of either Yale or Koh’s deanship,” Yoshino said. “I’ve heard from some corners, ‘Is this the end of the golden age for Yale Law School?’ I think that’s an unfair characterization. I think this is cyclical.”

Smith, who will start at Harvard in January, referred comment to an e-mail he sent out to the Law School community announcing his departure last August, in which he said he and his wife “are very excited about this change, but it was not an easy decision.” His wife, philosophy professor Sun-Joo Shin, is staying at Yale.

Benkler, already at Harvard, declined to comment. Alstott, Graetz and Dignam did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

“The recent departures are unusual in number, but most of them have to do with complicated family logistics in an era of two high-powered working spouses and the limited job opportunities for such people in New Haven,” law professor Peter Schuck, who commutes from New York, wrote in an e-mail.

In fact, he added, it’s “reassuring” given this situation that retention is not an even bigger problem.

Yale also added four professors this year: Thomas Merrill, a legislation and property professor from Columbia; Douglas Kysar, an environmental-law expert from Cornell; Scott Shapiro LAW ’90, a law and philosophy professor from the University of Michigan; and legal historian Nicholas Parrillo GRD ’01 LAW ’04.

Not everyone considers all the departures as major losses. Said one senior professor, who requested anonymity in order to speak candidly about colleagues: “A tree does not grow well unless it is pruned.”

Has ‘nothing’ changed?

Koh, who grew up in New Haven, said the city offers an unmatched intellectual community and is family friendly.

“Nothing has changed on that score,” he said. “People who want our strengths will still come here, and people who want other place’s strengths will go somewhere else. And that’s fine by me.”

U.S. Circuit Judge Guido Calabresi ’53 LAW ’58 said he heard the exact same concerns about New Haven’s attractiveness to two-career couples when he became dean 23 years ago. And his answer then, he said, was the same as his answer now: Because Yale recognizes this challenge, it will work harder to accommodate those people than other schools who simply rely on their cities to provide for professors.

New Haven has always been appealing because it is a center of legal scholarship, and that’s not in danger of changing, Schuck said in an interview. But the calculus might not be that simple anymore.

“The reason to be [in New Haven] was always because it was at the top,” said Brian Leiter, a law professor at the University of Chicago. “The problem is there’s a tipping point — if it’s not clearly at the top, why not go to Columbia?”

Leiter, once a visiting professor at Yale, blogs about law professors and publishes law school rankings.

Yale has set high expectations for itself, but it is “well-positioned” to continue to meet them, said Anupam Chander LAW ’92, who was a visiting professor at Yale last semester and is now visiting at the University of Chicago Law School.

“It’s easy to wax nostalgic about a ‘golden age,’ especially when it’s populated by some of the biggest names of legal scholarship in the 20th century,” he said. “There’s a risk of Yale Law School always being compared to its glorious past.”

Calabresi, the school’s dean from 1985 to 1994, who presided over what would be considered the golden age by those who claim there was one, said retaining faculty is something every dean has to be concerned about, but he said he doesn’t see “any special problem now.”

More important than the departures, Calabresi said, are Yale’s new appointments this year.

Asked, then, why the recent faculty changes have sparked so much speculation, he said, “It’s something to say. It makes news.”

The stakes

Compounding the concerns about retention, many of Yale’s remaining superstar scholars are graying. Almost half of the 60 or so full-time tenured Yale law professors are above the age of 60.

Koh said the faculty is in a natural cycle of generational transition. When he joined Yale Law School in the mid-1980s, the school had just experienced another such period, he said, with concerns about the departure of Robert Bork’s generation of all-star professors. Their replacements — among them Bruce Ackerman LAW ’67, Owen Fiss, Tony Kronman GRD ’72 LAW ’75 and Jerry Mashaw — turned out to be today’s all-stars, Koh said.

And, Chander said, the full significance of scholars and their scholarship often becomes apparent only in retrospect.

But almost all of the recent departures are in mid-career. Replacing both them and the retirees could be especially difficult because the Law School has steep qualifications for receiving tenure.

Unless Yale finds a systematic way to deal with these demographic changes within the decade, Yoshino said, its current retention challenges could mature into a full-blown crisis.

Asked how the Law School will prevent that, Koh said in a e-mail, “We will simply do what we always do: appoint world-class scholars such as the four exciting professors who arrived this year, and maintain a uniquely vibrant and intimate scholarly and teaching community that will inevitably attract other world-class scholars to join them.”

Not everyone is, like Yoshino, willing to wait 10 years. Yale’s reputation for having the best law faculty may already be at stake, Leiter said. Yale will always be among the leading law schools, he said.

“But will it be No. 1?” he added. “That’s what people at Yale Law School care about.”

Comments

None 3 years, 7 months ago

"Almost half of the 60 or so full-time tenured Yale law professors are above the age of 60."

Nah... tenured professors are OLD?!? My God.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

To Anonymous: Thornton Wilder, who died in 1975 at age 78, lived on Deepwood Drive n Hamden, about THREE FEET beyond the New Haven line, approximately one mile from the Green, off Whitney Avenue. His desk is on display in Hamden's Miller Library. The desk at which he wrote The Bridge of San Luis Rey was recently donated to the MacDowell Colony, in Peterborough, New Hampshire, where Wilder wrote Our Town.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Yale should be a HAVEN for the poor. How about Yale creating satellite computer training centers all over New HAVEN for the poor to drop in and take computer training FREE? Perish the thought that Yale might have to rub shoulders with the unkempt.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

As a Yale alum, I am very proud of the authors of this News' View. You have hit the nail on the head. Levin's credibility rests upon his decision. There really is no excuse this time around. The sad truth is there never has been an excuse.

At Yale, since the President is the sole voice in choosing Provosts and has the last say in the decanal choice, the buck stops at his own front door. No smokes and mirrors now; the stark truth is that the keys to diversify Yale's administration rest in Levins hands. Yale is not behind, the President has been.

How on earth can Yale be progressive if it adheres to the archaic model of recruitment solely from within and at the discretion of one individual. When will Yale emerge from the dark ages and cast a wide net for national or global talent? There Yale would find a deep pool of diverse candidates for all its searches. When will Yale move to a model where search committees are empowered to play a larger role in such key decisions?

President Levin, people are watching. Will your words ring true...or were they merely words?

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Perhaps some professors do not wish to be tainted with the Koh tarbrush. The Law School and it's Dean are seen as anti-government, meddlesome, off the charts liberal and basically the poster children for left wing politics. Maybe if they lay off the politics just a bit and actually teach they wouldn't have to look over thier shoulder at Harvard. Maybe Dean Koh should just campaign with Obama and get it over with.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Interestingly, Dean Koh is a graduate of both Harvard College and Harvard Law School.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

grd78:

You want Koh to be a pusillanimous cypher like the administrators of the 60's who turned American campuses into a powder keg by their aloof "neutrality"? It's time to talk turkey. There's something rotten in the Department of Justice. Bravo Dean Koh and to blazes with YLS being "first". A late Yale president said it best:"Winning isn't everything."

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

If #13's thinking is representative, then T.A.D. Jones, Yale '07 lies uneasy in his grave today. The gentlemen from New Haven have decided that competing against Harvard is not the most important thing that they will ever do in their lives. Back in the '20s, Jones used to tell his Yale teams that it was.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

This very issue of YDN contains the reason for and the solution to this exodus:Police crack down on drugs (and prostitutes); Campus police step up patrols in Bishop Street/East Rock Rd. areas;the economy teeters. Face facts: Yale is surrounded by a ghetto. A Yale student was murdered on the steps of the Catholic Church five houses from the President's house 20 years ago. Princes and paupers don't mix. Some redistribution of wealth and opportunity needs to be made here. Thornton Wilder lived a mile from Yale for 40 years and walked its streets unafraid. Would he do so today?

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Princes, Do you read the news in NYC or Boston? New Haven is a major city. Poorer sections of it will have hookers, just like any other city. Overall, New Haven's metro area is one of the wealthiest and safest in the United States.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Redistribution of wealth? What a hoot. No matter how much Robin Hood you might read, stealing isn't just.

Here's a question: who leaves a prestigious professorship Yale Law School because they can't make the commute?

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

well you learn something new everyday. thornton wilder was in fact alive forty years ago. i wikid it. i associate him with something old and bygone. and he lived in new haven?

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

Good article, Mollie! I agree 100%! I don't want to stop eating meat either, I just want the abuse to stop. I have friends that raise their farm animals humanely, and the animals actually grow in a very natural & even loving environment. This I believe is the way all farmers should be made to raise their animals. God did provide the animals for us to give us food, but He also commanded us to care for and be good stewards of the earth. What goes on in the world today is just another example of man's gluttonous greed.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

By:

Some professors, like Yoshino, are bigger than their professorship. In other words, he doesn't need the Yale name to command respect in academia.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

“But will it be No. 1?” he added. “That’s what people at Yale Law School care about.”

1 in which ranking? U.S. News? I thought Yale Law was above that frivolity.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

This kind of journalism is a little silly. Yale Law School is a stunning community of scholars and students. As some top scholars leave, YLS will always renew itself by hiring top new people because (1) those people want to teach YLS students, who are great, and (2) YLS has the financial resources to make big offers to star scholars from around the country & world. The dual-career issue is a problem, but not insurmountable.

So I wouldn't be too worried. Yes, if your obsession is whether YLS edges out Harvard next year or whatever, you can get tied up in knots about such things, but honestly, as a recent YLS grad, I can tell you, that's really not the thing most of us care about.

YLS does really need a tax scholar. Losing both our main stars in that field at once (Alstott & Graetz) certainly creates a major need. But I have no doubt Yale will find someone great in that field.

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None 3 years, 8 months ago

The Law School has slipped under the new dean, who has yet to find his footing. Harvard, Columbia and NYU are aggressively exploiting their locational advantages. To pretend otherwise is to ignore reality.

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