
Policies and procedures regarding academic and non-academic topics may be found both in the Student Handbook and in the relevant sections of the school website.
If you do not have a copy of the Student Handbook, please visit Student Services on the 5th floor of William and June Warren Hall. Below, several links and policies are listed for your convenience. If you have any questions, please feel free to email Student Services.
Columbia Law School invites students to share any suggestions or thoughts they might have about the Law School’s curriculum by submitting them to the Dean of Students at suggestions@law.columbia.edu.
Columbia Law School is committed to addressing student complaints about significant issues that negatively affect its program of legal education and its compliance with the ABA’s law school accreditation standards. Students with such a concern should submit the concern, in writing, to the Dean of Students at complaints@law.columbia.edu, who shall work with the appropriate administrator or faculty member to address the issue. The Dean of Students shall keep a record of all complaint submissions and their resolutions.
Two basic kinds of incidents may require review and, in some cases, discipline. There are, first, complaints by an individual student against a questionable form of academic treatment or involvement by a faculty member, and second, behavior or uses of language that appear to step beyond the established bounds of academic decorum and appear to threaten or arbitrarily dismiss either a collective group in our midst or seriously undermine basic understandings and recognized standards of conduct within our community.
Responsibility in the discipline of a faculty member will always be a decanal matter (with the ultimate right of review vested in the Provost, as Dean of all faculties), although we allow for situations in which the Dean would seek faculty advice and in-put. At the same time, we value the regular channels of communication and review that might lead to such action. Prior channels for receiving a complaint check the reliability and gauge the gravity of a given charge and, in many cases, supply a forum of mediation and resolution at initial stages in the process of articulation.
All complaints deserve serious attention as a basic protection of the values we stand for. Every review must take into account and balance basic understandings of academic freedom and academic obligation. With these high standards of review in place, we also reaffirm our belief that the peculiar nature and advanced stage of the education that we supply require that the School address its disciplinary problems within its own sphere of review processes. The sharp give-and-take of the Socratic method in the study of the law, and the adversarial procedures allowed in professional engagement, could be misconstrued in any other context.
The following enumeration of our current guidelines should be understood with these preliminary thoughts in mind:
See also:
Procedures for Student Discipline