Antonin Scalia Law School

The Antonin Scalia Law School is the law school of George Mason University, Virginia's largest public research university. It is located in Arlington, Virginia, roughly 4 mi west of Washington, D.C., and 15 mi east-northeast of George Mason University's main campus in Fairfax, Virginia. The law school is accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA). The school is known for its conservative ideological leaning in law and economics.

History
George Mason University School of Law was authorized by the Virginia General Assembly in March 1979 and was founded on July 1, 1979. The school started as the International School of Law (ISL), which opened in 1972 in a classroom at the Federal Bar Building on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC. In 1973, it moved into the home of former United States Chief Justice Edward Douglass White on Rhode Island Avenue, and in 1975 purchased the old Kann's Department Store in Arlington. Despite the growth, ISL could never obtain accreditation.

In 1976, ISL discussed a merger with George Mason University, which expressed interest in setting up a law school. In 1978, the Virginia State Council of Education denied GMU's proposal to start a law school and encouraged a merger with ISL instead. Later that year, the Council advised against allowing that merger, but the Virginia state legislature nonetheless approved the merger in early March 1979.

The law school became fully accredited by the American Bar Association in 1980. Since then, its rankings amongst U.S. law schools has risen rapidly over the decades, being ranked 32nd in the United States in 2023, according to US News and World Report.

In 2016, the school received $30 million to rename itself for Antonin Scalia, the late United States Supreme Court justice. The Charles Koch Foundation provided $10 million of the donation, with the remaining $20 million coming from an anonymous donor. On March 31, 2016, Mason's Board of Visitors approved the renaming. School officials soon announced a new name: Antonin Scalia Law School, a decision ratified by the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia on May 17, 2016. In 2022, ProPublica reported that the anonymous donation made in 2016 was allegedly from Barre Seid, a businessman and philanthropist known for his donations to conservative causes.

In 2019, the law school received a gift of $50 million, the largest ever received by the university, from the estate of Allison and Dorothy Rouse to "fund a chair or chairs that will promote the conservative principles of governance, statesmanship, high morals, civil and religious freedom and the study of the United States Constitution".

Admission and academics
For the Juris Doctor (J.D.) class entering in 2023, the law school received 2,303 applications and admitted 14%, of which 97 law students enrolled. The total enrollment of all J.D. students in 2023 was 546 law students. The median LSAT score among incoming J.D. students in 2023 was 168, and the median GPA was 3.89. The passage rate for first-time takers of the Virginia bar exam in July 2023 was 90.7%, third among Virginia's eight law schools.

The school also offers various Master of Laws (LLM) programs such as the Flex-LLM program which focuses on training and qualifying foreign law graduates to take bar exams in various U.S. states. In addition, the school offers in-residence and online LLMs that specialize in subjects such as cybersecurity, global antitrust, and intellectual property.

Rankings
In 2024, U.S. News & World Report ranked the George Mason University School of Law (Scalia) at 28th in the United States.

Tuition
The total cost of attendance (tuition, fees, and living expenses) for the 2023–24 academic year at Mason Law is $62,196 for in-state students attending full-time; the total cost of attendance for non-resident students attending full-time is $78,044.

Student-edited

 * George Mason Law Review
 * George Mason Civil Rights Law Journal
 * George Mason International Law Journal
 * National Security Law Journal
 * The Journal of Law, Economics & Policy

Law library
The George Mason Law Library has a collection of electronic and print materials providing access to legal treatises, journals, and databases. Non-legal materials are available through the GMU University Libraries. It is a selective depository for U.S. Government documents, and it provides inter-library lending services with other academic libraries, which enables students and faculty to borrow materials from major academic libraries.

The library occupies four levels of the law school building. It has 14 study rooms, 70 carrel seats, and 196 table seats wired with electrical and network connections, and a wireless network is available. The library also operates two computer labs with a variety of software. The library employs 16 full-time staff members, including 6 librarians with degrees in law and library science and 3 technology specialists. Access is limited to university faculty, students, staff, alumni and members of the bar.

Academic climate
The law school is known for its conservative ideological leaning in law and economics. In addition, the school is known for tilting towards conservative principles, a perception that increased with the renaming in 2016 to honor U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, a constitutional originalist.

A 2023 New York Times report detailed the school's effort to cultivate ties to the Republican-appointed U.S. Supreme Court justices. The author described the school as "a Yale or Harvard of conservative legal scholarship and influence".

National Security Institute
The law school is also home to the National Security Institute (NSI), a think tank dedicated to research in national security, especially the relevance of legal issues pertaining to national security issues in the global context.

Global Antitrust Institute
Antonin Scalia Law School also houses the Global Antitrust Institute (GAI), a think tank mainly concerned with antitrust and competition policy. In 2021, Bloomberg reported on the "revolving door" between members of the GAI's faculty who later held positions at the Federal Trade Commission, a government agency tasked with regulating many of the companies that make significant donations to the GAI and the law school at large.

Alumni

 * Jonathan H. Adler, American legal commentator and law professor at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law
 * John Bartrum, American lawyer and colonel in the United States Air Force Reserve
 * Robert Bixby, Executive Director of the Concord Coalition
 * Martha Boneta, American policy advisor, commentator, and farmer known for her role in the passage of a landmark right-to-farm law in Virginia
 * Anna Escobedo Cabral, Treasurer of the United States under President George W. Bush
 * Michael F. Cannon, director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute
 * James W. Carroll, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President Donald Trump
 * Kathleen L. Casey, Commissioner of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
 * Rabia Chaudry, Pakistani-American attorney, author, and podcast host; founder and president of the Safe Nation Collaborative
 * John Critzos II, American martial arts fighter and instructor teaching martial arts at the United States Naval Academy and personal injury lawyer
 * Katherine A. Crytzer, United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee
 * Ken Cuccinelli, Acting United States Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security, 46th Attorney General of Virginia, a former member of the Virginia Senate from the 37th district
 * William W. Eldridge IV, American General District Court Judge for the 26th Judicial District of Virginia
 * David Jolly, a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives
 * Colleen Kiko, chairman of the United States Federal Labor Relations Authority under Presidents Donald Trump and Joe Biden
 * Chris Krebs, director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency under President Donald Trump
 * Robert A. Levy, chairman of the Cato Institute and director of the Institute of Justice
 * Melissa A. Long, Associate Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court
 * William W. Mercer, United States Associate Attorney General under President George W. Bush and member of the Montana House of Representatives
 * Kendrick Moxon, lead counsel for the Church of Scientology
 * Paul F. Nichols, former delegate to the Virginia General Assembly
 * Liam O'Grady, judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
 * Maureen Ohlhausen, former commissioner of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission
 * Scott Pinsker, American filmmaker, talk-show host, author, and celebrity publicist
 * David J. Porter, judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
 * Steve Ricchetti, counselor to the president under President Joe Biden
 * Wesley G. Russell Jr., Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia
 * Harlan M. Sands, 7th President of Cleveland State University
 * Charles Stimson, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs under President George W. Bush
 * Glen Sturtevant, member of the Senate of Virginia from 2016-2020
 * Mary Kirtley Waters, Director of the United Nations Information Centre
 * John Whitbeck, chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia from 2015-2018
 * Richard L. Young, judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana

Faculty

 * David Bernstein, university professor, constitutional law scholar, and legal blogger at The Volokh Conspiracy
 * F.H. Buckley, George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law
 * Henry N. Butler, Henry G. Manne Chair in Law and Economics, director of Law & Economics Center and former dean
 * Ernest W. DuBester, member of the Federal Labor Relations Authority
 * Douglas H. Ginsburg, Senior Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and former U.S. Supreme Court nominee
 * Neil Gorsuch, Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court
 * Timothy Muris, George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law, former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
 * Todd Zywicki, George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law