Global Reach

Students come to Lewis & Clark because they seek to be part of a worldwide community. Across our three schools, we provide opportunities to get immersed in unfamiliar cultures and develop a broader context for global understanding.

Over half of our undergraduate students participate in off-campus and overseas programs, and all must demonstrate competency in a second language and explore another culture. Our law school offers a global law certificate and overseas study, externship, and work opportunities. Faculty and students from our graduate school have traveled to Uganda to lead family therapy training and have done related work in Egypt and India. 

5000
  • Some 65 percent of Lewis & Clark’s overseas programs go to countries outside Western Europe.

  • JD students can earn a Global Law certificate, which recognizes them for their achievements in global law.

  • Lewis & Clark’s overseas program celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2012. 

  • “Lewis & Clark has a vibrant international student body. It feels like a really good fit, and the best place for me to be.”
    —Dan Peniston

  • Students in the graduate school’s Marriage, Couple, and Family Therapy program can earn a concentration in international family therapy.

  • 60 percent of the undergraduate class of 2012 studied abroad.

  • The law school administers a student-exchange program with premier institutions in India, Germany, China, and elsewhere

  • Lewis & Clark was the first major American law school to establish a comprehensive, multifocused faculty and student exchange program in India.

  • About 10 percent of our undergraduate students come from another country. 

  • As one undergraduate student wrote in his journal from Samburuland, Kenya, “I might as well be on Mars. Nothing I have done, or ever will do, can possibly compare to this experience.”

  • Graduate students can complete a final-semester internship in Marriage, Couple, and Family Therapy in Ft. Portal, Uganda. 

  • In recent years, we have had students representing nearly 70 countries on campus.

Learn about our international education programs

News

IELP Professors and Students Protect Endangered Species at meeting in Bangkok, Thailand

Professors Chris Wold and Erica Lyman of Lewis & Clark Law School’s International Environmental Law Project (IELP) are on the road again. After traveling to Doha for the climate change negotiations where IELP provided legal assistance to Pacific island countries, they are now in Bangkok with seven IELP students to help 178 governments make decisions to protect species from overutilization due to international trade. They are participating in the meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) from March 3-14, 2013.

The Law School to Welcome Delegation from South Korea

Faculty and students from Kangwon National University will visit and attend environmental law classes on January 28 – February 1, 2013.
Jason Mohabir in front of his externship site in Delhi

Externs Gain Valuable Work and Life Experience in India

Three 1Ls ventured to Delhi to live and learn for the summer.