My most recent post in this three-part series discussed manifestations of law school moral hazard at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and Quinnipiac Law School. Both institutions have spent millions on flashy new buildings where attentive students will have a tough time getting jobs requiring the expensive JDs they are pursuing.

This series now concludes with two more schools that illustrate another dimension of the dysfunctional law school market. Recent graduates of Golden Gate University School of Law and Florida Coastal School of Law live in the worst of two worlds: Their schools have unusually low full-time, long-term, JD-required employment rates and unusually high average law student debt.