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Professor Elliott Quoted in Bloomberg Law

Heather Elliott Photo Professor Heather Elliott was quoted in a Bloomberg Law article titled Abortion Pill Case Highlights Supreme Court Flip on Who Can Sue. Read the full piece here.

Alabama Law Ranked #2 for Lowest Debt-to-Income Ratio Among Public Law Schools

Debt to Income Graphic

According to data from the U.S. Department of Education, The University of Alabama School of Law ranks #2 among public law schools and #7 among all law schools based on the median debt-to-earnings ratio of its graduates. More information about this ranking is available in the Winter 2024 Issue of The National Jurist.

See also: Alabama Law Ranked #3 for Best Value Law School and Alabama Law Ranks #7 for Federal Clerkship Placements

NYC Moot Court Team Finishes in Final Four

Dylan Cox and Austin Mendes

Dylan Cox and Austin Mendes

The NYC Moot Court team advanced to the final four in the 74th Annual National Moot Court Competition in New York City last week. The competition began in November with 197 teams across 15 regions. Alabama was one of 24 teams to qualify for nationals after finishing second at their regional competition in Nashville.

3Ls Dylan Cox, Austin Mendes, and Max Willinger wrote a brief that earned a 4th place ranking in the national competition, with Cox and Mendes representing the team in oral arguments. Their overall record for oral arguments in the competition was 8-2.

The team is coached by Professor Kimberly Boone.

Professor Vance Quoted in The New York Times

Joyce Vance, University of Alabama School of Law

Professor Joyce Vance was quoted in a New York Times article about the potential disqualification of Georgia prosecutor Fani Willis in her case against Donald Trump. Click here for the full story.

3L Swapanthi Mandalika Awarded WWCDA’s Justice Ginsburg Outstanding Law Student Award

Last month, Swapanthi Mandalika (a 3L at Alabama Law) was awarded the Women’s White Collar Defense Association’s (WWCDA) Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Outstanding Law Student Award in Washington, D.C. This national award is given to a woman in the final year of her legal education who best exemplifies Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s commitment to excellence, perseverance, resilience, extraordinary work ethic, and tireless efforts to ensure justice for all. While Mandalika is at the top of her class, has won 13 best paper awards in her courses, and has publicly been recognized as “the best student I’ve ever had,” by Professor Heather Elliott—who clerked for Justice Ginsburg—Mandalika’s academic journey was not easy. 

“Long before my time in law school, I was a girl failing my way out of high school,” said Mandalika. “Having taken the GED equivalent, my college experience wasn’t going much better.” 

Suffering from “intense, impenitent anxiety” that robbed her of the ability to complete coursework, Mandalika fell into such deep despair that she almost gave up on the journey that led her to law school. She points out that a simple lack of compassion from her teachers and peers led, in part, to this despair. In time, the absence of positive support drove her to find ways to create better experiences for those who came after her. 

“As a last-ditched effort to pull myself out of my near intractable despondency, I started a women’s support group at a low-income school in my neighborhood,” said Mandalika. “Across those meetings, I learned several invaluable lessons, chief among them that it is hard to feel useless when you are being helpful.” 

In leading the support group, Mandalika experienced a “personal rebirth” which remains the focus of her professional energies. “From here, whatever I achieve, I hope to return in kind to those who similarly suffer from the extreme diffidence that plagued my youth.” 

At the beginning of her second year in Law School, Mandalika carried out this commitment by joining a pilot program directed to help first-year law students navigate their rigorous, pressure-filled environments by providing a variety of academic resources. In the first three semesters she served in this program, she spent approximately 180 hours mentoring and supporting other students at Alabama Law. She will continue to serve in this capacity through graduation at the end of this spring semester.  

 

Our group, the Academic Success Fellows, met with students 2-3 times a week to ensure they were keeping pace in their classes. As part of my duties, I endeavored to not only answer my classmate’s questions, but I also sought to ensure students were abiding by the study plans we jointly created. Three times now, I have received a phone call from a fellow student thanking me for helping them achieve their first ‘A’ in law school. Tearfully, one student informed me that in lieu of calling her mother or her husband, she wanted me to be the first to know. That call from her remains my proudest accomplishment in law school. My rank as first in my class remains dwarfed in personal significance by her quiet reassurance that I had been a small agent in justice’s slow advance. –Swapanthi Mandalika

 

Looking Forward 

This spring, Mandalika and her husband will be welcoming their first child, a baby boy, into their family. Upon graduation, she has committed to clerkships in both the Northern District of Alabama and the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. She has also been offered a full-time position at the firm Latham & Watkins for future employment in their Washington, D.C. office upon completion of her clerkships. Ultimately, Mandalika plans to pursue a career in academia where she can continue to invest in student mentorship, scholarship, and advocacy. 

“I would hope to foster a cohort of legal professionals unburdened by the limitations of past or present generations, and only bound by the furthest grasps of their own imaginings,” said Mandalika.

Come Celebrate the 2024 Alabama Law Alumni Society Recipients

On Friday, March 1, the School of Law will host the annual Alabama Law Alumni Society Banquet at the Haven in Birmingham. Seven distinguished alumni featured below will be honored this year for their significant contributions to the legal community and Alabama Law. Purchase your tickets today to celebrate with us.

2024 Sam W. Pipes Distinguished Alumnus Recipient

W. Mike House (Class of 1971)

The Sam W. Pipes Award is the highest honor bestowed by The Law School Foundation to outstanding alumni of The University of Alabama School of Law, who have distinguished themselves through service to the Bar, The University of Alabama, and the School of Law.

2024 Alabama Lawyer Hall of Honor Inductees

Judy Whalen Evans (Class of 1975)

Vanessa Leonard (Class of 1995)

Robert F. Prince (Class of 1974)

M. Wayne Wheeler (Class of 1966)

The Alabama Lawyer Hall of Honor was established in 2020 by the Board of Governors of the Law School Foundation to recognize the outstanding achievement of Alabama Law alumni and faculty. Criteria for the award include making significant and extended contributions to the life of the Law School, having a distinguished career, and sustaining involvement in service activities.

2024 Alabama Rising Young Attorney Recipients

Stanley E. Blackmon (Class of 2015)

Christopher B. Driver (Class of 2015)

The Alabama Rising Young Attorney Award, established in 2020, recognizes a recent graduate who has shown significant leadership and purposeful service to the legal profession, their community, and the School of Law.

Come celebrate the 2024 Alabama Law Alumni Award Winners Friday, March 1, at Haven in downtown Birmingham! Purchase your tickets today.

BLSA Partners with Alabama Law to Produce Adapted Reading of MLK Speech

The Black Law Student Association (BLSA) at The University of Alabama partnered with Alabama Law to produce an adapted reading of “A Realistic Look at Race Relations,” a speech given by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

On May 17th, 1956, on the second anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education, and as the Montgomery Bus Boycott continued, Dr. King delivered this address at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s annual dinner. Watch the video above to hear excerpts from Dr. King’s speech read by current BLSA members at Alabama Law.

Alabama Law Ranks #7 for Federal Clerkship Placements

photo of the University of Alabama School of Law with text that reads "#7 for federal clerkship placements"

Law.com recently released their ratings for federal clerkships placements, compiled from 2022 ABA employment data. Alabama Law ranked #7 overall, and #2 for public law schools, in federal clerkship placements. The rankings were determined by comparing the percentage of 2022 JD graduates from each law school who secured federal judicial clerkships. Click here to read more about the federal clerkship rankings on TaxProf Blog.

Prof. Vars and Alabama Law Grad Co-Author Article Published in Texas A&M Law Review

Professor Fred Vars and Jillian M. Purdue ('23)

Professor Fred Vars and Jillian M. Purdue (’23) co-authored an article titled Time to Heal: Trauma’s Impact on Rape & Sexual Assault Statutes of Limitations that was published in the Texas A&M Law Review. Click here to read the article.