The University of Saskatchewan College of Law is the law school at the University of Saskatchewan. Located in Saskatoon in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, the college was established in 1912 and is the oldest law school in Western Canada, a distinction it shares with the University of Alberta.
Each year, approximately 126 students are admitted to the College of Law. In 2011/2012, there were 375 students enrolled. The previous year (2010/2011), there were 373 students; 362 students in 2009/2010; and 370 students in 2008/2009.
In the spring of 1913, the University of Saskatchewan appointed its first law professor, Arthur Moxon, previously a professor of classics in the University’s College of Arts and Sciences. At around the same time, the Law Society of Saskatchewan began offering lectures to articling students in Regina at a school of its own making, later called Wetmore Hall. The following decade would be marked by conflict between the Law Society and the fledgling University law faculty regarding responsibility for legal training in the Province.
Ultimately, Wetmore Hall was closed by resolution of the Law Society in 1922 and the University of Saskatchewan inherited full responsibility for the training of aspiring lawyers in Saskatchewan.
The College celebrated its centenary in 2012.
University Of Saskatchewan Law School Ranking
The College offers both the Juris Doctor (J.D.) and Master of Laws degrees. Of the 16 common law schools in Canada, the College placed 10th in the 2011 Maclean’s Magazine law school rankings.
university of saskatchewan qs ranking
University rankings | |
---|---|
Global rankings | |
ARWU World | 301–400 |
QS World | 458 |
Times World | 501–600 |
Facilities
The college’s Law Building reopened in March 2008 following renovations and expansions. The new building is 3,300 m2; and took just over two years and $16.5 million to complete.[7] The Law Foundation of Saskatchewan contributed $1 million to the project.
The new building has additional classrooms with multimedia capability, additional administrative offices, a new student lounge, student organization offices, and space for the college’s Native Law Centre. The new building has a “living roof” which is the largest of its kind in Saskatchewan, and the building is LEED Gold-certified.
The law building is connected to the Edwards School of Business and, indirectly, the Arts Building. The law building is located opposite Campus Drive from the Saskatoon Cancer Centre and Royal University Hospital.
The law library contains numerous artifacts, including one of the most unusual holographic wills ever written – the tractor fender of Cecil George Harris, who was trapped when his tractor overturned. On the fender he wrote, “In case I die in this mess I leave all to the wife. Cecil Geo. Harris.” Harris died of his injuries in hospital, the fender was probated and accepted as his valid last will.
Admissions
Tuition for September 2015 was $12,255.00 and mandatory student fees will be $805.89, for a total of $13,060.89. The cost of books and supplies is estimated at $2500.00. The 2015 entering class averaged a 3.34 GPA and 159 LSAT.
university of saskatchewan law school admission statistics
Overview
Applicants1,082Acceptance Rate25%Accepted Applicants Who Attend126
Test Scores
LSAT25th-75th percentile
(enrolled students)151 – 172
Deadlines
Application DeadlinesFebruary 1
Application Process
Rolling AdmissionsYes
Application Fee$125
LSDAS Service UsedNo
Applicants accepted in terms other than fallNo
Transfer Applicants AcceptedYes[+]
Other Admission Factors
Academic
LSAT Score
Undergraduate GPA
Selectivity Rating
Admissions selectivity rating60*
Challenge Cup
The Law Students’ Association hosts an annual hockey tournament in March or April, known as The Challenge Cup. The format of the one-day tournament sees first, second, and third year students form respective teams to battle with one another as well as with teams composed of Junior and Senior Alumni. The Challenge Cup was most recently won by the Class of 2014, in a victory that finally saw the end of the Class of 2013’s three year championship reign.
Notable alumni
- Edward Bayda – Chief Justice of Saskatchewan.
- Ted Culliton – Chief Justice of Saskatchewan.
- John Diefenbaker – Prime Minister of Canada.
- Willard Zebedee Estey – Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.
- Jonathan Denis, QC – Former Alberta attorney general and well known Calgary businessperson.
- Ralph Goodale – Current Minister of Public Safety and former Minister of Finance for Canada.
- Bruce Gordon #BeLikeBruce, athlete and Detective Sergeant