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What matters to the clients most, though, is winning their case. Fisher, the co-director of Stanford's clinic, argues in an upcoming law review article that parties who have the help of a clinic or law firm that specializes in Supreme Court advocacy are almost twice as likely to win their cases than parties that don't. Still, clinics have potential pitfalls. New York University law professor Nancy Morawetz has pointed out that the increased competition between law firms and clinics for the 70 to 90 cases the court hears each year can have negative consequences. The rush to land clients can mean less time by those law firms or clinics spent assessing a case and more reluctance to coordinate with other lawyers, she wrote in a recent law review article. "It has an ambulance-chasing quality to it," Morawetz said of the competition for cases. Morawetz said clinics can offer immense value, but she also questions the wisdom of focusing on the Supreme Court, an institution students already spend a lot of time studying in law school. For law schools with clinics, however, there's a prestige that comes with being able to say their students worked on a case before the high court. And the experience is unique. "There's no other place in the legal curriculum where students are put up against the best people in the country on the most cutting-edge issues of law," said Dan Ortiz, a law professor at the University of Virginia and co-director of its clinic, which was involved in four cases before the court in the last year.
Students uniformly praise the experience as one of the best they've had in law school, a chance to polish their legal writing and persuasion skills. Winn Allen, who participated in the University of Virginia's clinic during 2007 and 2008, said it was satisfying to watch a case he'd worked on be argued before the court and seeing the justices grapple with the same issues students had. Rose Leda Ehler, a student currently in Stanford's clinic, called the clinic "the most useful experience" she's had in law school. Corey Carpenter, 25, one of the students involved in George Mason's clinic, said he does see one potential downside in participating in the clinic: going back to ordinary cases after getting a taste of the Supreme Court.
[Associated
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