This was forwarded to me by one of western's current students. I am posting this here in the hopes that it helps someone.
Quote:
To All Law Students:
I have received several queries over the past two weeks from students who are concerned about the future of the Areas of Concentration programs at the Western Law. With this message of explanation, I am hoping to be able to answer many of your questions.
Over the past six years, the Faculty has operated four Areas of Concentration: Business, IPIT, Tax and Criminal Law. Over this past winter, a review process was initiated by myself and the Programs Committee to assess the future of the various AoCs. Given that the Programs Committee has long felt that a minimum of two full-time faculty members were required in order to create or maintain a viable AoC program, the Committee and I made the difficult decision to suspend the AoC programs in Criminal Law and Tax Law, beginning in the next academic year.
The decision was not taken lightly. The Faculty is proud of its many strengths, and we have been justifiably well-known for our traditional depth in tax law and criminal law. However, for the present moment, we do not have the faculty teaching complement to sustain the AoC in these two programs. As soon as our faculty numbers increased once again in these areas, we will carefully consider the feasibility of re-starting these AoCs.
Keep in mind several important things. First, the Faculty will continue to offer a rich variety of courses in tax law and criminal law. Anyone with an interest in these areas will still be able to obtain a high-quality legal education that will continue to be respected and accepted anywhere where it counts. Second, those students in second year who want to graduate in 2010 with an AoC in either of these areas will be able to. We will offer sufficient courses in 2009-10 to enable you to graduate with the designation. This includes those second year students who have not yet declared their desire to take one of the concentrations. And third, the Faculty is seriously looking at many of our other areas of strength to assess whether we will initiate new AoCs.
Some first year students will be disappointed that they will not have the opportunity to take an AoC in tax or criminal while they are studying at Western Law. I wish it was otherwise, but the Faculty cannot offer an AoC in these areas without the necessary full-time bench strength. We are in turbulent economic times, and that might restrict our ability to hire as many new faculty as we need and want over the next several years. However, rest assured that you will still be able to take a wide number of great courses in these areas at Western Law, and to compete on advantageous terms with law graduates from any other law school in the province and the country for high-quality jobs in these areas.
If you have any questions regarding the AoCs, please drop me a note and I will try to reply as completely and quickly as possible.
My best wishes for success in your upcoming exams and papers,
Professor Michael Lynk