During the autumn of 2009 and the spring of 2010, I worked on sabbatical projects from points on the globe that were some three thousand miles away from my desk in the Elder Law and Consumer Protection Clinic at the Dickinson School of Law of the Pennsylvania State University (Elder Law Clinic). In practical terms, however, I was never very far away, as I found myself speaking about the clinic to academics around the world.2 In 2011, Penn State’s Elder Law Clinic will celebrate its tenth anniversary of operations; about twenty other law schools in the United States have clinics dedicated to providing legal services to older adults, and there is growing international interest in clinical education connected to elder clients. Possibly, Elder Law clinics are helping to pave pathways for the study of the discipline of Elder Law. For example, one study describes the first documented course offered on Elder Law at a United States law school as an Elder Law clinic.