Barry Cappello, provide financial awards to admitted students with a history of success and interest in trial advocacy. The Irving H.
Green Prize, named for the successful Los Angeles trial lawyer, is awarded annually to the graduating students who have demonstrated excellence in trial advocacy.
For more information, contact program director Justin Bernstein. The challenge is finding time to take them all. The law school also offers more than 50 clinical and experiential courses, several of which give students the opportunity to advocate in court. Each semester, A. Barry Cappello '65 hosts The Art of the Trial, where he and other leading practitioners discuss their high-profile cases and address the real-world dimensions of trial practice, from jury selection and class-action litigation to strategies for preserving issues on appeal.
The Art of the Trial series takes students beyond coursework and provides them practical tools they can use throughout their careers. Irving H. Green was a much-honored trial attorney known for representing the underdog in courts across the country. He also was a member of the Inner Circle of Advocates, a group whose membership is limited to outstanding trial lawyers in the United States. Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in , Irving Green grew up poor and attended night school, graduating from law school when he was only While waiting a year to be sworn into that state's bar its legal minimum age was 21 , he worked for West Publishing Company, selling law books so that he could earn enough money to open his own law office.
Green was admitted to practice in California in , and he practiced in Los Angeles until Irving Green's enthusiasm for his work, his determination to help those who had no other champion, and his excellence and creativity serve as an inspiration today. The Green family has chosen to honor Irving Green by creating a program designed to bring truly outstanding trial lawyers to UCLA to inspire law students and to engage in an exchange with them focused on the often unpopular role of lawyer. Baker '75 Harland W.
Braun '67 A. Barry Cappello '65 Anna Y. Park '92 Stephen C. The Cappello Program also hosts lectures on practical, contemporary topics. This prestigious certificate recognizes the recipient's curricular and co-curricular commitment to and training in trial advocacy.
In order to receive the Cappello Certificate for the academic year, the law school requires satisfactory completion of the following:. Centers Of Excellence. Trial Ready Careers in the courtroom start here, with courses focused on oral and written advocacy, trial teams to test your skills and a certificate for those who complete the trial advocacy course of study. Our goal is to ensure that our graduates are prepared to be litigators before they take their first case.
The program features a rich curriculum including courses in pretrial advocacy as well as trial advocacy and incorporating cutting-edge features such as case records uploaded onto iPads and videotaped classes that allow professors to give students feedback on their performance arguing cases.
Learn More. The Trial Advocacy program at UW Law is grounded in the core skills you need to become a successful litigator while incorporating a modern understanding of psychology and technology.
We start with a foundation of traditional trial procedure and then shift to looking inside the mind of the audience. Psychology has increasingly revealed the types of messages audiences will best respond to, and we now know the dominant role that stories and emotion play in winning cases. These inform our teaching approach.
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