Daniel D. Smith International School of Law collection
Access and use
- Location of collection:
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2400 Fenwick LibrarySpecial Collections Research CenterFenwick Library MS2FLGeorge Mason UniversityFairfax, VA 22030
- Contact for questions and access:
- POC: Mieko PalazzoEmail: speccoll@gmu.eduPhone: (703) 993-2220Fax: (703) 993-2669Web: scrc.gmu.edu
- Restrictions:
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There are no access restrictions.
- Terms of access:
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The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)
- Preferred citation:
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Daniel D. Smith International School of Law collection, C0086, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.
Collection context
Summary
- Extent:
- .75 Linear Feet 2 boxes
- Creator:
- Smith, Daniel D.
- Abstract:
- This collection contains materials related to Daniel D. Smith's role in creating the International School of Law, which later became the George Mason University School of Law, including correspondence, publications, faculty and board meeting minutes and foundational principles and policies for the then newly created law school.
- Language:
- English
- Preferred citation:
-
Daniel D. Smith International School of Law collection, C0086, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.
Background
- Scope and content:
-
This collection contains materials related to Smith's role in creating the International School of Law, which later became the George Mason University School of Law, including correspondence, publications and faculty and board meeting minutes.
Series 1 of this collection provides information on the founding of the law school, the policies it held and the Judeo-Christian principles under which it was founded.
Series 2 contains the minutes from faculty and Board of Trustee meetings, arranged by date. These meetings discussed various topics from faculty appointments and dismissals on how to win American Bar Association accreditation.
Series 3 deals with the accreditation issue more directly. The International School of Law spent years attempting to gain the American Bar Association approval and suffered a number of setbacks and rejections. Series 3 contains the letters between the law school and the Association, suggestions for improvements and the actions taken by the school.
Series 4 contains a number of writings by Daniel Smith, including notes from the Contract Law course he taught for the law school while there.
Series 5 contains a number of publications by the International School of Law, in the form of newsletters, as well as correspondence with several States' Supreme Courts and the Virginia Board of Bar Examiners in attempts to allow their non-accredited graduates to sit for the bar exam. This series also contains material on the mergers and affiliations that the International School of Law tried to develop in order to gain accreditation. The merger with George Mason University is the last and most successful of these.
Series 6 contains information on the day-to-day administration of the International School of Law, complete with hirings and salaries as well as disciplinary action for Deans and professors who were dismissed and replaced during the law schools independency. This last series also contains the personal log book that Smith kept while employed by the law school.
- Biographical / historical:
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Daniel D. Smith is a lawyer and a co-founder of the International School of Law in 1972, now the George Mason University School of Law. After receiving a law degree at the University of Virginia School of Law in 1969, Smith was admitted to the Virginia Bar and to the District of Columbia Bar shortly thereafter. When the International School of Law opened in 1972, Smith held the position of Administrative Dean. He later served as Acting Dean and then Associate Professor until he moved from teaching to private practice in 1978. He served as a member of the American Bar Association and the Virginia Bar Association and helped found and chaired several organizations, including Young Life of Loudoun County, the Loudoun Vocational Education Fund, and Loudoun Healthcare Foundation.
- Acquisition information:
- Donated by Daniel D. Smith in 2008.
- Processing information:
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Processed by Tom Duncan in 2010. EAD markup completed by Tom Duncan in 2010.
- Arrangement:
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Organized into six series.
Missing Title- Series 1: Principles and Policies, 1972-1977 (Box 1)
- Series 2: Meetings, 1972-1978 (Box 1)
- Series 3: American Bar Association Accreditation, 1972-1978 (Box 1)
- Series 4: Daniel D. Smith, 1970s (Box 1)
- Series 5: International School of Law, 1970s (Box 1)
- Series 6: Administrative and Faculty Matters, 1973-1978 (Box 2)
- Rules or conventions:
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard