Top 20 Government & Regulatory Career Rankings 2023
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This report forms part of the EduTimes Law Ranking Legal Career Pathway Rankings series, which evaluates law schools, legal education institutions, and career-development ecosystems based on graduate outcomes across BigLaw placement, global law firm placement, judicial clerkships, in-house counsel careers, government and regulatory careers, international organization careers, compliance and risk careers, and LegalTech careers.
Government & Regulatory Career Rankings evaluate law schools based on their ability to prepare graduates for careers in federal agencies, state and local government, prosecutors’ offices, public defenders’ offices, attorneys general offices, congressional and legislative bodies, financial regulators, competition authorities, environmental agencies, communications regulators, health agencies, administrative bodies, and public-sector legal policy roles.
Unlike BigLaw placement, this category cannot be measured only by immediate private-sector hiring. Government and regulatory careers often include multiple entry routes: honors programs, agency internships, clerkships, fellowships, state government roles, federal regulatory practice, law firm regulatory work, congressional service, public interest litigation, and later movement into public office or agency leadership.
The class of 2025 legal employment market shows why this category matters. LawHub’s national employment data reported that 82.7% of ABA graduates held long-term, full-time legal jobs, 5% held long-term, full-time JD Advantage jobs, 25.7% entered BigLaw roles, and 3.2% entered federal clerkships. Its school-level data also tracks public service outcomes, making public-sector placement a distinct career pathway rather than a secondary employment category.
Market Overview
The government and regulatory legal career market is broad, but not uniform. It includes litigation-facing roles such as prosecution, public defense, civil rights enforcement, state attorney general litigation, and federal agency enforcement. It also includes advisory and policy-facing roles in financial regulation, antitrust, tax, telecommunications, energy, environmental law, healthcare, privacy, procurement, national security, immigration, labor, and administrative law.
Law schools that perform well in this category usually share several characteristics: access to Washington, D.C. or major state capitals, strong administrative law and regulatory faculty, government employer relationships, public service career advising, externship programs, clinics, fellowships, alumni in agencies and public office, and demonstrated placement into government or public service roles.
This category should be distinguished from International Organization Career Rankings. Government & Regulatory Career Rankings focus primarily on domestic public-sector and regulatory pathways, especially U.S. federal, state, and local government. International Organization Career Rankings should later focus on the United Nations system, World Bank, IMF, WTO, ICC, OECD, international NGOs, treaty bodies, and transnational public-law organizations.
It should also be distinguished from Compliance & Risk Career Rankings. Compliance & Risk Career Rankings should focus more on private-sector compliance, AML, sanctions, financial crime, internal investigations, enterprise risk, privacy governance, and regulated-industry risk management. Government & Regulatory Career Rankings focus on public authority, regulatory institutions, agency practice, public service, and government-facing legal careers.
Industry Trend — 2023
The government and regulatory legal career market in 2023 is shaped by five major trends: public-sector hiring volatility, regulatory specialization, administrative law change, state-level enforcement growth, and stronger demand for technology-aware public lawyers.
First, public-sector hiring has become more volatile. ABA Journal reported that the number of law school graduates entering government, public interest, and federal clerkship jobs decreased in 2025, with those full-time, long-term categories down about 14% from the prior year. This makes law school career infrastructure more important, because students seeking government roles often need early planning, multiple application strategies, and strong fallback pathways.
Second, regulatory specialization is increasingly important. Agencies and public-sector legal offices now require lawyers who understand financial markets, antitrust, AI governance, privacy, cybersecurity, procurement, environmental regulation, healthcare, labor, energy, telecommunications, and administrative procedure. Schools with strong regulatory law programs are better positioned than schools that treat government work only as general public service.
Third, administrative law has become more contested and more valuable. Students preparing for careers in agencies, regulatory litigation, congressional oversight, or regulated industries need stronger grounding in statutory interpretation, agency procedure, separation of powers, judicial review, and the changing role of the administrative state.
Fourth, state-level enforcement is becoming more important. State attorneys general, state financial regulators, environmental agencies, labor departments, public utility commissions, and health agencies are increasingly central to public enforcement and regulatory experimentation.
Fifth, technology has changed government lawyering. Lawyers entering public service must increasingly understand AI governance, data privacy, platform regulation, cybersecurity, digital evidence, procurement technology, and algorithmic accountability. Schools with technology-policy and regulatory-law infrastructure are therefore advantaged.
Methodology — Core Eligibility Criteria
To ensure structural consistency within the category, institutions considered for this ranking were evaluated based on the following eligibility conditions:
- Operates as an ABA-accredited U.S. law school or comparable J.D.-granting institution with visible government, public service, regulatory, or administrative-law career relevance
- Demonstrates meaningful pathways into federal agencies, state and local government, attorneys general offices, prosecutors’ offices, public defenders’ offices, congressional offices, courts, regulatory agencies, or public-sector legal policy roles
- Maintains institutional capacity through public service advising, government employer relationships, regulatory law curriculum, administrative law faculty, clinics, externships, fellowships, alumni networks, or public-sector funding support
- Shows relevance across administrative law, constitutional law, financial regulation, antitrust, environmental law, health law, technology policy, national security, procurement, tax, labor, criminal justice, civil rights, and state or local government practice
- Represents a specific law school, rather than a government agency, public-sector recruiter, legal job board, private career coach, or general university brand without law-school-specific career relevance
Institutions were not ranked solely by one-year public service percentage. Government and regulatory career strength also depends on public-sector career infrastructure, agency access, regulatory-law depth, alumni placement, geographic positioning, and long-term public leadership pathways.
Methodology — Ranking Factors
Institutions included in the ranking were evaluated using a combination of quantitative, qualitative, and structural considerations. Key factors considered include:
- Public service and government employment outcomes
- Federal clerkship and clerkship-to-government pathway strength
- Government, public interest, and regulatory career advising infrastructure
- Access to Washington, D.C., state capitals, major regulatory markets, and public-sector employers
- Strength in administrative law, constitutional law, legislation, financial regulation, antitrust, environmental law, technology policy, procurement, health law, and national security
- Externship, clinic, fellowship, honors-program, and public-sector internship support
- Alumni network depth in agencies, legislatures, attorneys general offices, courts, public policy organizations, and government-facing practices
- Long-term pathway reliability for public-sector, regulatory, and public leadership careers
The Law Ranking Top 20 Government & Regulatory Career Rankings 2023 evaluates law schools based on government career strength, regulatory-law depth, public-sector advising, agency access, public service outcomes, alumni network strength, administrative-law relevance, and long-term public leadership pathway reliability.
The ranking universe consisted of approximately 190–200 ABA-accredited law schools and comparable U.S. J.D. institutions, from which 20 institutions were selected for inclusion.
Tier classifications reflect relative institutional positioning within the government and regulatory career ecosystem and do not represent job-placement guarantees, salary guarantees, public office guarantees, agency hiring guarantees, admission recommendations, legal advice, procurement advice, investment recommendations, or endorsement of any specific law school.
Tier I — Leading Government & Regulatory Career Law Schools
Georgetown University Law Center
- Headquarters: Washington, D.C.
- Founded: 1870
- Core focus: Federal government, regulatory law, public interest, financial regulation, technology policy, congressional and agency careers
Georgetown Law is one of the strongest government and regulatory career institutions because of its Washington, D.C. location, public-sector employer access, and broad regulatory-law curriculum. Georgetown’s Office of Public Interest and Community Service was created in 1996 and serves as the hub for students interested in public interest and government legal opportunities.
Georgetown’s advantage is especially strong in federal agency practice, congressional work, financial regulation, antitrust, technology policy, national security, healthcare, tax, government contracts, and international economic regulation. Its Business & Financial Regulation curriculum includes corporate law, securities regulation, and antitrust, while its technology institute focuses on AI, automation, data privacy, digital rights, governance, and the rule of law.
The school is especially relevant for students targeting federal agencies, congressional offices, D.C. regulatory practices, public-sector litigation, policy roles, and later movement between government and private regulatory practice. Its location, employer relationships, curriculum breadth, and public service infrastructure support its Tier I placement.
George Washington University Law School
- Headquarters: Washington, D.C.
- Founded: 1865
- Core focus: Government procurement, federal agencies, environmental and energy regulation, public sector, administrative law, D.C. legal market
George Washington Law is one of the strongest government and regulatory career schools because of its D.C. location and unusually deep government-facing curriculum. GW Law describes itself as the academic birthplace of government procurement law and the world’s preeminent government contracts law program, educating government procurement lawyers and acquisition professionals for more than 60 years.
GW also benefits from direct public-sector recruiting infrastructure. The Public Sector Recruiting Program, hosted annually by GW Law and Georgetown Law, gives students access to more than 250 public interest and public sector employers through interviews, networking, and recruiting events.
The school is especially relevant for students targeting federal agencies, procurement law, environmental and energy regulation, public contracts, D.C. government practice, and policy-facing regulatory work. Its government contracts specialization and D.C. employer access support its Tier I placement.
Harvard Law School
- Headquarters: Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Founded: 1817
- Core focus: Federal government, public leadership, constitutional law, public interest, regulatory policy, national and global public service
Harvard Law School remains one of the strongest government and regulatory career platforms because of its national reputation, alumni network, and public service infrastructure. Harvard’s Bernard Koteen Office of Public Interest Advising provides attorney advisers, career resources, and support for students and alumni pursuing public interest and government careers.
Harvard’s strength lies in long-term public leadership rather than only immediate public-sector placement. Graduates move through federal clerkships, DOJ, agencies, state government, academia, public interest organizations, international bodies, congressional service, and later regulatory leadership roles. The school’s federal clerkship strength also supports later entry into government litigation, appellate work, and agency leadership pathways.
Harvard is especially relevant for students seeking broad public-sector optionality, including DOJ, federal agencies, constitutional litigation, appellate government practice, regulatory policy, and public leadership. Its alumni reach, advising infrastructure, and national public-service credibility support its Tier I placement.
Yale Law School
- Headquarters: New Haven, Connecticut
- Founded: 1824
- Core focus: Public service, federal government, constitutional law, public interest, academia, courts, policy leadership
Yale Law School is a leading institution for government and public service careers because of its faculty-driven culture, clerkship strength, public-interest orientation, and alumni presence in government, courts, academia, and policy leadership. Yale’s public interest career resources describe public interest law as including government organizations, nonprofit organizations, and public-interest work by law firms.
Yale is especially strong for students pursuing federal clerkships, constitutional litigation, appellate government work, public law, civil rights, academia, state and federal policy roles, and long-term public leadership. Its placement model is not dependent on immediate agency employment alone; it often works through clerkships, fellowships, academia, policy institutions, and elite public-law networks.
The school is especially relevant for students targeting high-level public service, courts, federal government, academia-to-government pathways, and policy leadership. Its public-law reputation and government-facing alumni network support its Tier I placement.
New York University School of Law
- Headquarters: New York, New York
- Founded: 1835
- Core focus: Public interest, regulatory policy, environmental law, public health, consumer protection, financial regulation, New York and federal public service
NYU Law is one of the strongest government and regulatory career schools because of its public service infrastructure and regulatory-policy depth. NYU’s Public Interest Law Center describes itself as offering extensive funding opportunities and career planning programs, and frames its goal as helping all graduates incorporate public service into their careers.
NYU is particularly strong in regulatory policy. Its Institute for Policy Integrity uses economics and law to support policies in environment, public health, and consumer protection, while its Regulatory Policy Clinic focuses on advocacy before federal agencies and courts and develops core administrative lawyering skills.
The school is especially relevant for students targeting environmental regulation, public health, consumer protection, administrative law, public interest litigation, New York government, federal agencies, and policy-facing legal work. Its public service infrastructure and regulatory-policy specialization support its Tier I placement.
Tier II — Established Government & Regulatory Career Law Schools
(Alphabetical order)
American University Washington College of Law
- Headquarters: Washington, D.C.
- Founded: 1896
- Core focus: Public interest, government service, human rights, civil rights, policy advocacy, D.C. public-sector market
American University Washington College of Law is a strong government and public service pathway school because of its D.C. location and explicit public interest identity. The school describes its public interest programs as among the strongest in the nation and emphasizes opportunities for students to gain legal experience through pro bono and public service programs.
American’s career office also works with government agencies, public interest organizations, courts, firms, and businesses to create professional opportunities for students and alumni. This makes the school particularly relevant for students targeting public-interest advocacy, civil rights, international human rights, regulatory policy, and D.C.-based public service.
American is placed in Tier II because it has strong government and public interest infrastructure, though its national regulatory placement power is less dominant than Georgetown and GW.
Columbia Law School
- Headquarters: New York, New York
- Founded: 1858
- Core focus: Public service, government careers, financial regulation, enforcement, New York public-sector and federal pathways
Columbia Law School is a strong government and regulatory career institution because of its public service office, New York location, and private-public career optionality. Columbia’s Office of Public Interest/Public Service Law and Careers supports students seeking full-time public interest or government work and frames public service lawyering as a major professional pathway.
Columbia’s regulatory relevance is especially strong in financial regulation, enforcement, securities, antitrust, technology policy, public corruption, state and federal prosecution, and New York government. Many graduates also enter BigLaw or clerkships before moving into government-facing work.
The school is placed in Tier II because of its strong public service infrastructure and New York regulatory market access, although its overall placement identity remains heavily private-sector oriented.
Duke University School of Law
- Headquarters: Durham, North Carolina
- Founded: 1930
- Core focus: Government and public interest careers, federal clerkships, environmental law, health law, national public service, public-sector advising
Duke Law is a strong government and regulatory career school because it provides dedicated public interest and government career advising, funding, and professional development. Duke’s Office of Public Interest and Pro Bono offers comprehensive career advising and support for students and alumni interested in government and public interest positions.
Duke’s relevance is strengthened by its federal clerkship placement, national employer reach, and public-sector funding support. Its graduates can pursue government roles directly or through clerkships, fellowships, regulatory practice, public interest litigation, and later agency service.
Duke is placed in Tier II because it provides strong national government-career optionality, especially for students seeking a combination of clerkship, public service, and regulatory-law pathways.
George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
- Headquarters: Arlington, Virginia
- Founded: 1979
- Core focus: Administrative law, government regulation, law and economics, federal agencies, D.C. regulatory market
George Mason’s Antonin Scalia Law School is one of the most category-specific schools for administrative law and government regulation. Its Administrative Law and Government Regulation focus area is designed for students interested in practice in and before government agencies or in the regulatory process through which government governs businesses and individuals.
The school also houses the C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the Administrative State, which describes itself as a leading hub for research and debate on legal and policy issues involving separation of powers and the administrative state.
George Mason is especially relevant for students targeting administrative law, federal regulation, law and economics, agency litigation, D.C. regulatory practice, and government-facing policy work. Its regulatory specialization supports Tier II placement.
Stanford Law School
- Headquarters: Stanford, California
- Founded: 1893
- Core focus: Public service, technology policy, government careers, regulatory innovation, Silicon Valley governance, federal and state policy
Stanford Law School is a strong government and regulatory career platform because of its public service infrastructure and technology-policy environment. Stanford’s Levin Center houses public service and career services programs and coordinates skills training, career panels, mentoring, and events for students and alumni committed to public interest careers.
Stanford’s government and regulatory relevance is particularly strong in technology policy, AI governance, privacy, platform regulation, environmental law, public interest litigation, federal clerkships, and state-level innovation policy. Its Silicon Valley location adds a distinctive dimension to public-sector legal careers involving technology and regulatory design.
Stanford is placed in Tier II because its government pathway is powerful but less D.C.-centered than Georgetown or GW. Its technology-policy and public service orientation remain highly distinctive.
University of California, Berkeley School of Law
- Headquarters: Berkeley, California
- Founded: 1894
- Core focus: Public interest, environmental law, technology policy, state and federal regulatory work, California public-sector pathways
Berkeley Law is a strong government and regulatory career school because of its public interest culture, California legal market access, and strength in environmental, technology, privacy, and public law. Berkeley’s public interest and public sector career fair brings together more than 80 employers and is co-sponsored by the Career Development Office and Field Placement Program.
Berkeley is especially relevant for students interested in environmental regulation, climate policy, technology regulation, privacy, state attorney general work, public interest litigation, and California public-sector practice. Its public-law identity and access to California’s large regulatory ecosystem make it a strong category fit.
Berkeley is placed in Tier II because it offers a powerful West Coast government and regulatory pathway, especially for students interested in technology, climate, and state-level regulatory work.
University of Chicago Law School
- Headquarters: Chicago, Illinois
- Founded: 1902
- Core focus: Public service, federal clerkships, law and economics, regulatory analysis, government service, administrative law
The University of Chicago Law School is a strong government and regulatory career institution because of its analytical reputation, federal clerkship strength, and public service advising infrastructure. Chicago Law states that its Office of Career Services includes dedicated public service and judicial clerkship advisors who assist students and alumni pursuing public-sector, nonprofit, government, fellowship, and international opportunities.
Chicago’s government and regulatory strength is closely tied to law and economics, administrative law, antitrust, financial regulation, public law, constitutional law, and federal clerkship-to-government pathways. Its graduates are well positioned for analytical roles in agencies, appellate government practice, academia, and regulatory litigation.
The school is placed in Tier II because of its public-law depth and clerkship-to-government relevance, even though its immediate public service percentage is not its only strength.
University of Michigan Law School
- Headquarters: Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Founded: 1859
- Core focus: Public interest, government service, state and federal public law, civil rights, environmental law, national public-sector careers
Michigan Law is a strong government and public service career school because of its national alumni network and broad public interest infrastructure. Michigan describes public interest law as covering many substantive areas, including civil rights, environmental law, child advocacy, urban development, health law, litigation, transactions, and business law work.
Michigan also provides public service funding support, including a 2L Public Service Guarantee for students working with qualified government or public interest organizations. This makes the school relevant for students seeking early public-sector experience and later government employment.
Michigan is placed in Tier II because it combines national portability, public-interest culture, funding support, and strong alumni networks across government and public service.
University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
- Headquarters: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Founded: 1850
- Core focus: Public service, regulatory law, interdisciplinary policy, government careers, public-private leadership
Penn Carey Law is a strong government and regulatory career school because of its public service support, interdisciplinary institutional environment, and public-private career pathways. Penn states that its legal education opens doors to leadership opportunities in public and private sectors across the nation, around the world, and locally.
Penn’s Toll Public Interest Center emphasizes that the Law School provides extensive summer funding, postgraduate fellowships, loan repayment, and employment support for students dedicated to public interest careers.
Penn is placed in Tier II because it combines public-service funding support with strong private-sector and regulatory-law optionality, making it relevant for students who may move between government, policy, and regulated industries.
University of Virginia School of Law
- Headquarters: Charlottesville, Virginia
- Founded: 1819
- Core focus: Public service, federal clerkships, D.C. government pathways, litigation, regulatory practice, public leadership
The University of Virginia School of Law is a strong government and regulatory career institution because of its D.C. proximity, federal clerkship outcomes, public-service resources, and national employer reach. UVA’s public service job search resources include guidance on public service internships and careers, application trackers, interview and networking support, and career fairs.
UVA is especially relevant for students targeting federal clerkship-to-government pathways, D.C. regulatory practice, state and federal government, litigation, public service, and later public leadership. Its strong private-sector placement also creates later pathways into agencies and regulatory roles.
UVA is placed in Tier II because it provides strong public-sector optionality while maintaining elite law firm and clerkship access.
Tier III — Strong Government & Regulatory Career Pathway Schools
(Alphabetical order)
Boston University School of Law
- Headquarters: Boston, Massachusetts
- Founded: 1872
- Core focus: Public interest, government careers, health law, technology, Boston public-sector and regulatory market
Boston University School of Law is a strong government and regulatory pathway school, particularly for students interested in public interest, government, health law, technology, and Boston-area public-sector opportunities. BU Law’s public interest and government career resources describe public interest practice as including policy work and direct representation across areas such as disability rights, human trafficking, internet neutrality, and immigrant advocacy.
BU’s career office also includes public service and career-development support for government and public interest pathways. The school is especially relevant for students targeting public-sector or regulatory work in healthcare, technology, education, state government, and nonprofit policy organizations.
BU is placed in Tier III because it has meaningful government and public interest infrastructure, though its national regulatory placement power is more regional than the Tier I and Tier II schools.
Cornell Law School
- Headquarters: Ithaca, New York
- Founded: 1887
- Core focus: Public service, government internships, New York and federal pathways, regulatory practice, private-public mobility
Cornell Law School is a strong government and regulatory pathway school because of its national brand, public service support, and strong private-sector-to-government optionality. Cornell’s public service resources direct students to federal government opportunities, government and public interest positions, and public-sector internship resources.
Cornell’s government-career relevance is also tied to its BigLaw strength. Graduates who begin in major firms can later move into agencies, state government, enforcement roles, or regulatory policy. This private-public mobility matters in fields such as antitrust, securities, tax, labor, technology, and financial regulation.
Cornell is placed in Tier III because it offers strong government-career optionality, though its immediate institutional identity is less public-sector-focused than several schools ranked above it.
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law
- Headquarters: Los Angeles, California
- Founded: 1949
- Core focus: Public interest, California government, entertainment and technology regulation, civil rights, local and state public-sector careers
UCLA Law is a strong government and regulatory pathway school because of its public interest counseling infrastructure and Southern California public-sector market access. UCLA’s Office of Public Interest Counseling supports students, alumni, and organizations and is designed to strengthen UCLA Law’s commitment to public service.
UCLA is especially relevant for students targeting California government, civil rights, local government, entertainment regulation, technology policy, public defense, prosecution, state agencies, and public interest litigation. Los Angeles also offers a large and diverse set of public-sector and nonprofit legal employers.
UCLA is placed in Tier III because it is a strong California-centered public-sector and regulatory pathway school with meaningful national reach.
University of Texas School of Law
- Headquarters: Austin, Texas
- Founded: 1883
- Core focus: Texas government, public interest, public defense, energy regulation, state agencies, Austin/Dallas/Houston public-sector markets
Texas Law is a strong government and regulatory career school because of its state government access, Texas legal-market strength, and public service resources. Texas Law’s public interest and public defense career resources support students pursuing public service work and provide guidance for government and public interest pathways.
The school’s location in Austin gives students access to the Texas legislature, state agencies, public utility regulation, energy policy, environmental regulation, healthcare regulation, and attorney general or public-sector litigation pathways. Texas also supports strong movement between law firms, government, and regulated industries in energy, technology, finance, and infrastructure.
Texas is placed in Tier III because it provides one of the strongest state-government and regulatory pathways outside Washington, D.C.
Vanderbilt University Law School
- Headquarters: Nashville, Tennessee
- Founded: 1874
- Core focus: Public interest, government service, law and economics, regulatory policy, Southern and national public-sector pathways
Vanderbilt Law is a strong government and regulatory career pathway school because of its public interest office, career advising, and regional-to-national legal placement. Vanderbilt’s Public Interest Office prepares students for public interest careers through advising, programming, community support, and training opportunities during and after law school.
Vanderbilt also offers one-on-one public interest career advising for students interested in government service, public defense, legal aid, advocacy organizations, and social justice entrepreneurship.
The school is especially relevant for students targeting government and regulatory pathways in Tennessee, the South, federal agencies, public interest organizations, and law-and-policy roles. Its advising model and public-service culture support Tier III placement.
Remarks
Government & Regulatory Career Rankings serve a practical function within the legal education ecosystem. They help applicants, students, public-sector employers, agencies, policy organizations, and institutional stakeholders understand which law schools provide the strongest pathways into government service, regulatory law, public policy, public enforcement, administrative law, and public leadership.
The institutions recognized in this ranking represent law schools whose graduates maintain credible access to federal agencies, state and local government, public-sector litigation, attorneys general offices, prosecutors’ offices, public defenders’ offices, congressional roles, regulatory agencies, and public-law policy careers. Tier classification reflects relative institutional positioning within the government and regulatory career ecosystem rather than direct guarantees of public-sector hiring outcomes.
For the Law Ranking taxonomy, Government & Regulatory Career Rankings should remain distinct from International Organization Career Rankings and Compliance & Risk Career Rankings. Government & Regulatory Career Rankings should focus on domestic public-sector legal careers, administrative law, agency practice, public enforcement, and regulatory policy. International Organization Career Rankings should focus on multilateral, treaty-based, international NGO, and global governance roles. Compliance & Risk Career Rankings should focus on private-sector compliance, investigations, sanctions, AML, privacy governance, and regulated-industry risk management.
Tier classification reflects relative public-sector career strength, regulatory-law depth, government employer access, public service advising, agency and legislative pathways, administrative-law relevance, alumni network strength, and long-term public leadership potential. The ranking does not constitute a job-placement guarantee, salary guarantee, agency hiring guarantee, public office guarantee, admission recommendation, legal advice, procurement recommendation, investment recommendation, or endorsement of any specific law school.
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