Joni Hersch and Kip Viscusi have posted an interesting paper counting the number of law professors at the “top” schools that have Ph.D. degrees. Of course, “top” is in the eye of the beholder: Hersch and Viscusi divide schools into the “Top 13″ and then the “Top 26.” A few of the findings:
- At the “Top 13″ schools, 32.3% of faculty members have Ph.D.s. The most prevalent subject area for the Ph.D. was economics, with 9.2% of faculty members having an economics Ph.D. (see page 23)
- At the next tier of schools, those ranked 14 to 26, the proportion of Ph.Ds dropped: 20.4% have a Ph.D. of some kind, with 4.1% having a Ph.D. in economics (see page 23)
- Of the faculty at the Top 26 schools taken together, 979 have only a J.D. degree; 294 have a J.D. and a Ph.D; and 65 have only a Ph.D. and no J.D. (see page 21)
The paper does not indicate how many of these doctoral whizzes have traditional indicia of excellence like top grades, Order of the Coif, law review membership, prestigious clerkships, or practice experience at top law firms. You know, credentials that actually have something to do with ... I don't know ... the practice of law!
It seems like these days all you need is a doctorate and a database, not any actual legal knowledge.