The Elisabeth Haub School of Law is the law school at Pace University in White Plains, New York. Originally founded in 1976 as Pace Law School, it was renamed in 2016 for Elisabeth Haub (in recognition of Haub's environmental advocacy and philanthropy). The American Bar Association (ABA) accredited it in 1978, and its campus is home to the New York State Judicial Institute, which serves as a statewide center for the education, training, and research facility for all judges and justices of the New York State Unified Court System.
The law school also has a top-ranked environmental law program.
For the classes starting in 2024, 52% of applicants were accepted by the law school, 28.6% of those accepted enrolled, and the enrolled students had a median 153 LSAT score and a 3.5 undergraduate GPA.<sup>[1]</sup>
In 2024, the law school had a 68.55% pass rate for first-time takers, while 78.22% passed a bar examination within two years of graduation. In 2024, 71.01% first time takers passed from the jurisdiction of New York, 54.55% from New Jersey, and 57.89% passed from 6 remaining jurisdictions.
The law school has several joint degree programs which require additional applications for admission. This option includes dual degrees with four masters programs in the Yale School of the Environment (Master of Environmental Management, Master of Environmental Science, Master of Forestry, and Master of Forest Science), and an M.S. in Environmental Policy at Bard College.
John Jay Legal Services, Inc. is a not-for-profit legal services firm that houses and runs the clinic and externship programs at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law, including the Amelia A. Gould Representation in Mediation Clinic, Barbara C. Salken Criminal Justice Clinic, Environmental Litigation Clinic, Equal Justice America Disability Rights Clinic, Fairbridge Investor Rights Clinic, Food and Farm Business Law Clinic, and Immigration Justice Clinic. Additionally, the school operates several nationally renowned centers and institutes including the Pace Energy and Climate Center, Land Use Law Center, and WomenâÂÂs Justice Center.
According to the law school's official 2024 ABA-required disclosures, after graduation 75.4% of the Class of 2023 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment (i.e., as attorneys) and 9.27% obtained JD-advantage employment. Most employment was in 1âÂÂ10 attorney firms or in government, and no graduates obtained federal clerkships. The graduate Under-Employment Score as calculated by Law School Transparency is 9.7%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2023 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.
In 2025, U.S. News & World Report ranked the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at #141 out of 197 schools (tie). Trial Advocacy tied at No. 13, Dispute Resolution tied at No. 29, and International Law tied at No. 59.
U.S. News also ranked the law school's Environmental Law program #1 in 2025, alongside Lewis & Clark, U.C. Berkeley, Vermont, and Columbia. In 2024, The Lexinter Law Directory ranked the Environmental Law program #2 out of the âÂÂ16 Best Environmental Law Schools" alongside NYU, Harvard, Columbia, and Yale.