Alexander W. Scherr
Associate Professor and Director of Civil Clinics
B.A., Yale University
J.D., University of Michigan
Courses Offered:
Civil Clinic
Public Interest Practicum
Dispute Resolution
Professional Biographical Information:
Alexander
W. Scherr joined the University of Georgia School of Law faculty in
1996 as the first director of civil clinics. He created the Civil
Externship program and helped to establish the Family Violence Clinic.
In addition, he teaches and manages the Public Interest Practicum.
Scherr provides clinical instruction in these programs, and also
teaches Dispute Resolution and Evidence and co-teaches in the Etowah
Practicum and the Land Use Clinic.
Scherr
also serves as program coordinator for the Cousins Public Interest
Fellowship. He initiated and helped to design the law school's
Mediation Practicum, designed to provide students with certification as
court-related mediators.
His recent scholarship includes "Daubert and Danger: The 'Fit' of Expert Predictions in Civil Commitments" in the Hastings Law Review and "Lawyers and Decisions: A Model of Practical Judgment" in the Villanova Law Review. Scherr also edits Georgia Law of Evidence (5th ed., 1999), a text originally created by the late UGA professor Thomas Green.
Scherr earned a B.A. cum laude from Yale University and a J.D. cum laude
from the University of Michigan. He spent two years in private practice
in Vermont, then 11 years at Vermont Legal Aid, where he directed both
its general program and the Mental Health Law Project. He practiced
actively in state and federal appellate courts, in both individual and
class action suits, and advocated in both legislative and
administrative fora. Scherr also practiced as a mediator in family,
small claims and community disputes and participated actively in the
Vermont Mediators Association and in various government commissions and
committees on dispute resolution.
Scherr
has served as an active member of the executive committee of the AALS
Section on Clinical Legal Education. He has also served on the board of
the Clinical Legal Education Association
serving as President in 2005. He also serves on the Board of the
Society of American Law Teachers. Scherr serves as a consultant for
clinical programs nationally and as a drafter of the Multistate
Performance Test for the National Conference of Bar Examiners.
Scherr participates actively in local, state, regional
and national education programs. He helped design portions of the
Georgia Chief Justice's Commission on Professionalism's
nationally-recognized pilot mentoring program. He has presented
continuing education programs for both practitioners and judges on
topics including domestic violence law, mental health law and
negotiation. He regularly presents at national and regional clinical
legal education conferences, and serves as a primary organizer of
national training for new clinicians.
Scherr was selected as one of 10 UGA Lilly Teaching
Fellows for 2000-02. The program recognizes excellence in teaching and
provides funding to strengthen course work, program development and
scholarship. In 1999, he was videotaped as one of 50 citizens
nationwide to read and discuss their favorite poem for the Favorite
Poems Project, developed by the poet laureate and archived in the
Library of Congress.
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