Dennis CurtisDennis Curtis is Clinical Professor of Law Emeritus at the Yale Law School, where he teaches courses on sentencing and professional responsibility.Professor Curtis was one of the pioneers of clinical education in the 1970s. He created a program at Yae in which faculty supervised students working with indigent clients in a variety of contexts, so that students could gain insights into an area of substantive law in an administrative-regulatory context. For example, Yale Law students represented federal inmates at Danbury Federal Correctional Institution, and patients at Connecticut Valley mental hospital. At U.S.C., where he taught from 1981 to 1996, students assisted federal inmates at Terminal Island Federal Correctional Institution and state inmates at the California Institute for Women at Frontera, California. In addition, clinical students working with Professor Curtis at Yale and at U.S.C. were active in legal service programs on behalf of aliens, the elderly, the homeless, the developmentally disabled, and clients of legal aid societies.In 1997, upon returning to Yale Law School, Professor Curtis developed a new clinical offering with the Connecticut agency charged with administering the lawyer disciplinary process. For several years, he directed that clinic, in which students worked with Connecticut's State Disciplinary Counsel to prosecute lawyers who violated rules of professional conduct. Professor Curtis has continued to teach about the ethics of lawyering, and in more recent years, developed a course on Professional Ethics, Public Interest, and the Media.In addition, since the late 1990s, Professor Curtis has joined sitting judges and law professors in shaping new courses on the law of sentencing. Professor Curtis's writings in the area of post-conviction justice include Mistretta and Metaphor, 66 Southern California Law Review 607 (1992); The Reform of Federal Sentencing and Parole Laws, National Prison Project Journal, Fall 1987, and the book Toward a Just and Effective Sentencing System: Agenda for Legislative Reform (with Pierce O'Donnell and Michael Churgin) (Praeger 1979).Professor Curtis has also written several essays on clinical education and the legal profession, including: Educating Lawyers: Clinical Programs and the Legal Profession, Keynote Address at World Clinical Conference, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan, September 8, 2006 (published as translated into Japanese in 2007); Teaching Billing: Metrics of Value in Law Firms and Law Schools (with Judith Resnik), 54 Stanford Law Review 1409 (2002); Grieving Criminal Defense Lawyers (with Judith Resnik), 70 Fordham Law Review 1615 (2002); and Can Law Schools and Big Law Firms Be Friends? 74 Southern California Law Review 65 (2000).Professor Curtis received his B.S. from the U.S. Naval Academy and his LL.B. from Yale. After graduating from the Naval Academy, Professor Curtis spent eight years in the United States Navy, for most of that time as a line officer in submarines. Read More Read Less