SWLAW Blog | Faculty Scholarship Spotlight

Meera E. Deo headshot

December 3, 2025

Southwestern Professor Meera E. Deo Leads First National Study on Disabled Law Students

外网天堂 Professor Meera E. Deo, The Honorable Vaino Spencer Chair, has directed the first comprehensive empirical analysis of law students with disabilities in the United States, offering a rare national portrait of who these students are, how they experience law school, and where institutions are falling short. 

鈥淥ne in five law students lives with a disability,鈥 Deo said. 鈥淯ntil we analyzed the data, I didn鈥檛 know the number was that high. That鈥檚 a significant segment of the student body, and it should reshape how we think about student support. 

The 2025 LSSSE Annual Report, Disability in Law School, shows that the majority of disabilities reported by law students are invisible mental health conditions鈥攎ost commonly anxiety, depression, and ADD/ADHD. Despite some setbacks, disabled students remain deeply engaged across academic and professional activities. 

Deo notes that this level of engagement is often overlooked. 鈥淪tudents with disabilities go above and beyond in law school,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey spend more time than others preparing for class and participating in class discussions and are more likely to work with professors on research, join moot court, and lead student organizations.鈥 

Yet the data also reveal significant disparities in institutional support. Disabled students report lower levels of belonging and satisfaction with advising, career services, and job-search support. They are less likely to feel valued by their law school and more likely to struggle with wellbeing and outside responsibilities such as work or family obligations. As Deo notes, 鈥淲e are failing them if we expect them to do this on their own, instead of providing the institutional support they need to thrive.鈥 

For Southwestern, the project reflects a broader commitment to understanding and expanding access within legal education. As The Honorable Vaino Spencer Chair and Director of the Law School Survey of Student Engagement (LSSSE), Deo has built her career documenting the lived experiences of students whose needs often go unmeasured. She is also a nationally recognized scholar of race, gender, and inequality in legal education, and author of Unequal Profession: Race and Gender in Legal Academia (Stanford University Press), the first national empirical study of law faculty using an intersectional lens. Deo also co-leads the Survey on the Engagement of Law Faculty and Staff (SELFS), which collects national data from law faculty and student-facing staff. Her mixed-method research has been widely cited for reshaping national conversations about the profession. 

The demographic patterns revealed in the study challenge longstanding assumptions. Two-thirds of non-binary students report at least one disability. Disability prevalence rises sharply with age, reaching 31 percent among students in their thirties. Across all groups, most reported disabilities are mental health or developmental conditions鈥攁n indicator of both the pressures facing today鈥檚 law students and the need for more responsive institutional structures. 

鈥淥ur findings confirm that students with disabilities are giving their all.鈥 Deo said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not enough that law schools provide legally required accommodations. We can and should do more to understand their needs and provide tailored support.鈥