A law school of varying colors
Shawbong Fok
Walk along one of the fluorescent-lighted hallways of Whittier Law
School in Costa Mesa and you will see a row of wood-framed pictures,
listing its graduates, year by year in chronological order.
At the end of the row, there is the 2003 graduating class frame,
in which you see names like Robina Ali, Man Thi Nguyen, Horacio De La
Vega, Bradford Cormany Beckett and Jameika Williams.
Such diversity underscores the recent change in the legal
profession, historically the bastion of white males, according to
Robert Wylie, associate dean of Whittier Law School. The change is
perhaps best exemplified by Whittier Law School, the second most
diverse American Bar Assn.-approved law school -- there are 187 of
them -- according to a recent survey by U.S. News and World Report.
Whittier Law School’s student body today includes a 21% Asian, 7%
black, 1% Native American and 13% Latino population. Being immersed
in a diverse learning climate is critical for law students if they
want to understand the multiple perspectives inherent in legal
issues, Wylie said. The study and practice of law entails that one
look at such issues in subtle grays, not clear blacks and whites, he
added.
The nuances in legal issues are further complicated when
practicing law in diverse climates like Southern California, where
more than 80% of Whittier Law School alumni reside.
“Different perspectives are important when one practices law in
global megalopolises like Los Angeles, where an attorney encounters
various cultural and ethnic groups,” said Courtney Adolph, a Los
Angeles-based attorney.
The racially diverse atmosphere at Whittier Law School stems from
the confluence of three historical forces: the law school’s
open-minded, open-door policy, implemented in 1966, when the law
school was founded by Beverly Ruebens; the changing racial makeup of
the Los Angeles metropolis over the past several decades; and, in the
years past, relatively low Law School Admissions Test scores by its
students.
It was Ruebens’ open philosophy that enticed attendance from women
and minorities more so than many other law schools in the nation,
Wylie said, at a time when most law students were white males. In
1975, the law school merged with and started to get influence from
Whittier College, founded by the Quakers in 1887. Whittier College’s
philosophy comes from the Quakers, which is one of openness and
tolerance for all people, Wylie said. Therefore, affirmative action
was implemented in the admissions process.
Los Angeles was essentially an Anglo metropolis in 1960, when more
than 80% of its population was white, according to the Census Bureau.
But it would become the most racially diverse metropolis in the world
in 2000, with a population of 10.4% Asian, 40.3% Latino, 0.9% Native
American, 7.6% black, and 39% white.
Whittier Law School largely taps into that racially rich pool when
drawing law school applicants for admissions.
“I imagine that if we were in Vermont or Wisconsin, it would be
hard to achieve the level of diversity that we have,” Wylie said.
Historically, Whittier Law School has drawn students who
collectively had among the lowest Law School Admissions Test scores
in comparison with those in other American Bar Assn.-approved law
schools, according to the U.S. News and World Report. The 2002
entering class had an average score of 150, in the 47th percentile.
“Lower LSAT scores broadens the ethnic diversity,” Wylie said.
Still, a diverse law school helps the legal community, some
lawyers say.
“To have a diverse law school helps to diversify the legal
profession,” said Stewart Kwoh, a MacArthur fellow and an executive
director of the Asian Pacific American Legal Center. “Having a
diverse law school provides more legal access and assistance for
minorities and ultimately provides more social justice.”
Whittier Law School has one of the nation’s highest percentages of
Vietnamese-American law students. Many of these students, once they
graduate, return to Little Saigon, the epicenter of the largest
Vietnamese community in the world outside of Vietnam itself, Kwoh
said.
“It is important to increase lawyers in communities like Little
Saigon because there is a shortage of attorneys in Southeast Asian
communities,” Kwoh said.
Others disagree that having a diverse law school helps.
“Diversity is overrated,” said Ethan Pham, a student at Whittier
Law School. “I have not received any benefit from sitting next to an
underrepresented minority. I would have felt better if I was sitting
next to the most qualified academically on the basis of LSAT and GPA.
There is a stereotype that just because you are a certain race that
you are going to have a certain perspective. People should be judged
by the content of their character.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.