The following is the rank, according to U.S. News and World Report, of the top tax departments, evaluating all two hundred or so law schools in the U.S.
- 1. NYU (#1 last year)
- 2. Florida (#2)
- 3. Georgetown (#3)
- 4. Northwestern (#4)
- 5. UCLA (#7)
- 6. Harvard (#5)
- 6. Miami (#6)
- 8. Boston University (#8)
- 9. Virginia (#10)
- 10. Michigan (#13)
- 10. Texas (#9)
- 10. Yale (#10)
- 13. Loyola-L.A. (#16)
- 13. Stanford (#13)
- 15. U. of Washington (#18)
- 16. San Diego (#10)
- 17. Chicago (not ranked)
- 18. Duke (#15)
- 19. Columbia (#21)
- 19. Denver (#21)
- 19. Penn (#18)
- 22. SMU (#17)
- 22. USC (#21)
- 22. Villanova (#18)
* Remember that these rankings are very, VERY fallible.
* No law school is coming close to taking NYU's top spot.
* Teaching quality may be better at UF (#2) than #3 (G'Town), but quality of students and career prospects are probably better at G'Town.
* Northwestern has quickly put together a very solid tax program. Unfortunatley for them, I doubt they will rank higher than #4 for many years (NYU, UF, and G'Town have a tight grasp on those top three slots).
* I'm shocked UCLA ranks so high. I'm doubtful they really have a better program that Miami or Boston.
* The drop from 10 last year to 16 for San Diego is surprising. USD takes their tax department quite seriously, so I am sure that this drop will hurt recruiting next year.
* Villanova and SMU have made a lot of noise about their tax department over the last year. They seemed to be a strong choice for the "third tier" tax students. This change will probably cause a lot of people to go elsewhere next year (unless they have ties to the area).
* I'm sure Loyola tax people are celebrating right now.
1 comment:
And my law school falls again. It's so frustrating to be accepted to a Tier 1 (and yeah, I know they've readjusted the tiers, but who cares?), and the graduate from tier 2. :(
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