Jun 27, 2024  
Graduate Record 2010-2011 
    
Graduate Record 2010-2011 [ARCHIVED RECORD]

Course Descriptions


 

Landscape Architecture

  
  • LAR 6020 - Foundation Studio II


    Series of analytical exercises and field visits leading to a schematic design proposal for an urban landscape project. Funded travel studio, in conjunction with ARCH 602, to examine, experience and analyze significant designed landscapes and buildings. Prerequisite: L AR 601.



    Credits: 6
  
  • LAR 6160 - Advanced Topics in the History of Landscape Design


    Advanced seminar on topics in the history of landscape design. Advance historical research and analysis of designed and other landscapes. Permission of instructor required for undergraduates.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 6180 - Advanced Topics in Landscape History


    Advanced seminar on topics in landscape history. Advanced historical research and analysis of the history of landscape formation and change. Permission of instructor required for undergraduates.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 6410 - Representing Landscape


    Course explores ways of representing, analyzing and designing the landscape through a variety of 2D and 3D media including drawing, collage, model making & digital modeling. Students will explore manual and digital techniques to represent the physical and phenomenal structures of landscape, site, and ground and encouraged to incorporate the two means fluidly & expressively. The media and assignments will align with LAR 6010 first-year LAR studio



    Credits: 1
  
  • LAR 7010 - Foundation Studio III


    Semester long design project, usually of a complex urban or suburban site that explores the contemporary public realm at multiple scales, from the urban watershed to the detail.



    Credits: 6
  
  • LAR 7310 - Planted Form


    Develops a design vocabulary specific to individual plant architecture and collective planted form studying the structure and dynamics of native plant communities, vernacular planting systems and design precedents. Vocabulary and principles applied in the formulation of plant palettes for specific design intentions and situations. Prerequisite: L AR 537 and 538, or instructor permission.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 7320 - Regenerative Technologies


    Introduces the design potential of remediation technologies ranging from conventional engineering to emerging bioremediation systems. Review of contaminants’ impact on soil and water, applying remediation strategies integrated with site design. Offered for half of semester.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 7340 - Site Assembly


    Introduces landscape construction materials and methods for their assembly, focusing on small structures. Uses case study analysis to explore the expressive design potential of materials, technical concerns for performance and durability, and ethical concerns for sustainability.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 7350 - Site Work


    Integrates ecological principles with engineering applications in the area of urban watershed management. Topics include urban hydrology and soils, storm water management and low impact development techniques, as well as constructed wetlands and stream restoration. Prerequisite: L AR 533 or L AR 534, or permission of instructor.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 7700 - Advanced Landscape Drawing and Representation


    Explores ways of representing, analyzing and designing the landscape through a variety of media to include drawing, collage, image processing, model making and digital modeling. Prerequisite: L AR 601, 602, 701.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 8010 - Comprehensive Studio


    Semester -long design project that integrates eco-technology course content - earthwork, planted systems, and site assemblies - with a conceptual design idea, leading to the comprehensive and rigorous design development of a landscape. Prerequisite: ALAR 702.



    Credits: 6
  
  • LAR 8320 - Contract Documents and Professional Practice


    Capstone course applying ecological and engineering techniques to the detailing and implementation of a small project, developed into a set of contract documents (drawings and specifications). Concurrent introduction to methods and models of design practice administration: proposal, contracts, project management, collaboration and licensure. Prerequisite: L AR 534, L AR 734, L AR 735.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 8500 - Special Studies in Landscape Architecture


    Independent research on topics selected by individual students in consultation with a faculty advisor. Prerequisite: permission of instructor.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LAR 8800 - Teaching Experience


    Involves serving as a teaching assistant for a course, with teaching assignments coordinated by the chair. Prerequisite: permission of instructor.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAR 8993 - Independent Study


    Independent research on topics selected by individual students in consultation with a faculty advisor. Prerequisite: Landscape Architecture faculty approval of topic.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LAR 8999 - Non-Topical Research


    Non-Topical Research.



    Credits: 3

Latin

  
  • LATI 5010 - History of Republican Latin Literature


    Lectures with readings from the beginning to the end of the Republic. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5020 - History of Latin Literature of the Empire


    Lectures with readings from Vergil through Juvenal. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5030 - History of Medieval Latin Literature


    Studies of medieval Latin literature from Boethius to Dante. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5040 - Prose Composition


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5050 - Latin Paleography.


    Studies scripts and book production from antiquity to the Renaissance. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5060 - Roman Comedy


    Studies selected plays of Plautus and Terence. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5070 - Latin Elegy


    Studies selections from Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5080 - Roman Satire


    Studies the satiric fragments from the Roman Republic and Horace’s Sermones; the origins of Roman Satire. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5090 - Roman Literary Criticism


    Studies Roman literary theory, with readings from the Rhetorica ad Herrenium, Cicero’s works on the principles of oratory, Horace’s Ars Poetica, and Quintilian. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5100 - Lucretius


    Selections from Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura and the development of Roman Eipcureanism. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5110 - Catullus


    Studies the surviving poems of Catullus, with particular attention to questions of genre, structure, and literary history. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5130 - Cicero’s Philosophical Works


    Focuses on the ethical and epistemological or on the theological or political treatises. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5140 - Cicero’s Rhetorical Works


    Readings from the orations and from the rhetorical treatises. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5150 - Sallust


    Studies the historical monographs Catilina and Jurgurtha in their literary and historical setting, with attention to the remains of the Histories and other contemporary documents. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5160 - Vergil’s Aeneid


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5170 - Vergil’s Eclogues and Georgics


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5180 - Horace’s Odes


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5190 - Livy


    Selected readings from the Ab urbe condita. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5200 - Ovid’s Metamorphoses


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5210 - Ovid’s Love Poetry


    Studies readings from the Amores, Heroides, Ars Amatoria, and Remedia Amoris. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5220 - Tacitus


    Selections from Tacitus. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5230 - Petronius


    Studies Petronius’ Satyricon and the development of fiction-writing in classical antiquity. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5240 - Juvenal


    Studies the satires of Juvenal and the development of satire among the Romans. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5250 - Seneca’s Philosophical Works


    Studies selected philosophical texts of Seneca, chiefly the Epistulae Morales and the nature and development of Roman Stoicism. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 6
  
  • LATI 5260 - Latin Epic after Vergil


    Studies readings from Lucan, Statius, and Silius Italicus. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5270 - Apuleius Metamorphoses


    Reading of the text and study of the work’s influence on subsequent literature and art. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5280 - Christian Latin Writings of the Roman Empire


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 5559 - New Course in Latin


    New course in the subject of Latin.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LATI 5993 - Independent Study


    Independent Study in Latin. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 7060 - Roman Religion


    Examines the institutions, practices, and attitudes associated with Roman religion, focusing chiefly on aspects of Roman religion as practiced in the city of Rome itself, and devoting itself primarily to the Republican and early imperial periods. Cross listed as HIEU 706. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 7559 - New Course in Latin


    New course in the subject of Latin. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LATI 8010 - Seminar on Select Topics in Latin Literature


    For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 8060 - Latin Textual Criticism


    Studies advanced problems in Latin palaeography and in the transmission of Latin texts. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LATI 8559 - New Course in Latin


    New course in Latin. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LATI 8998 - Non-Topical Research, Preparation for Research


    For master’s research, taken before a thesis director has been selected. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3 to 12
  
  • LATI 8999 - Non-Topical Research


    For master’s thesis, taken under the supervision of a thesis director. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3 to 12
  
  • LATI 9559 - New Course in Latin


    New course in the subject of Latin. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 1 to 4
  
  • LATI 9998 - Non-Topical Research, Preparation for Doctoral Research


    For doctoral research, taken before a dissertation director has been selected. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3 to 12
  
  • LATI 9999 - Non-Topical Research


    For doctoral dissertation, taken under the supervision of a dissertation director. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.virginia.edu/classics/.



    Credits: 3 to 12

Latin American History

  
  • HILA 5001 - Colonial Latin American History


    An intensive reading program in the historiography of major issues of the colonial field, in preparation for graduate-level research. Prerequisite: Advanced undergraduates with consent of instructor and graduate students with reading knowledge of Spanish.



    Credits: 3
  
  • HILA 5002 - Modern Latin American History


    An intensive reading program in the historiography of major issues of the modern field, in preparation for graduate-level research. Prerequisite: Advanced undergraduates with consent of instructor and graduate students with a reading knowledge of Spanish.



    Credits: 3
  
  • HILA 7001 - Colonial Latin America


    A readings course open to graduate students with a reading knowledge of Spanish.



    Credits: 3
  
  • HILA 7002 - Modern Latin America


    A readings course open to graduate students with a reading knowledge of Spanish.



    Credits: 3
  
  • HILA 8011 - Colonial Latin America


    A research seminar open to graduate students with a reading knowledge of Spanish or Portuguese.



    Credits: 3
  
  • HILA 8021 - Modern Latin America


    A research seminar open to graduate students with a reading knowledge of Spanish or Portuguese.



    Credits: 3

Law

  
  • LAW 6000 - Civil Procedure


    This course covers the procedures courts use in deciding lawsuits that do not involve criminal misconduct. Much of it is concerned with the process of litigation in trial courts, from the initial documents called pleadings, through the pre-trial process, especially the process of discovery in which parties obtain information from one another, to trial itself.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6001 - Constitutional Law


    This course is an introduction to the structure of the U.S. Constitution and the rights and liberties it defines. Judicial review, federalism, congressional powers and limits, the commerce clause, and the 10th Amendment are covered, as are the equal protection and due process clauses.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6002 - Contracts


    This course examines the legal obligations that attach to promises made in a business contract or otherwise, including the remedies that may be available for promises that are not kept. The course examines the legal requirements for enforceable contracts, including consideration, consent and conditions, and the effect of fraud, mistake, unconscionability, and impossibility.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6003 - Criminal Law


    This course explores the basic principles of Anglo-American criminal law, including the constituent elements of criminal offenses, the necessary predicates for criminal liability, the major concepts of justification and excuse, and the conditions under which offenders can be liable for attempt. Major emphasis is placed on the structure and interpretation of modern penal codes.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 6004 - Legal Research and Writing (YR)


    This is the first semester of the yearlong basic skills course in the first-year curriculum covering fundamental legal research techniques, two styles of legal writing, and oral advocacy. In this first semester, students complete various research and citation exercises and write three office memoranda of increasing length and complexity.



    Credits: 0
  
  • LAW 6005 - Legal Research and Writing (YR)


    This is the second semester of the yearlong basic skills course in the first-year curriculum covering fundamental legal research techniques, two styles of legal writing, and oral advocacy. In this second semester, students write an appellate brief and present an appellate oral argument before a panel of alumni, faculty, and Dillard Fellows (upperclass teaching assistants).



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 6006 - Property


    The course is a general introduction to property concepts and different types of property interests, particularly real property. The course surveys present and future estates in land, ownership and concurrent ownership. Leasehold interests, gifts and bequests, covenants and servitudes, conveyancing, various land use restrictions, eminent domain, and intellectual and personal property issues are also considered.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6007 - Torts


    The course examines liability for civil wrongs that do not arise out of contract. It explores three standards of conduct: liability for intentional wrongdoing, negligence, and liability without fault, or strict liability, and other issues associated with civil liability, such as causation, damages, and defenses. Battery, medical malpractice, products liability, and tort reform will also be covered.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6100 - Accounting: Understanding and Analyzing Financial Statements


    This course provides an understanding of the concepts of financial accounting and published financial statements.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 6101 - Corporate Finance


    This course is the second half of the combined four-credit Accounting/Corporate Finance course. The central theme is understanding the sources of value for the firm from the perspective of the manager who must make financing choices (sources of funds) and investment choices (uses of funds) to maximize the value of the firm.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 6102 - Administrative Law


    This course covers the role of agencies in the constitutional structure and their operations. Topics include the nondelegation doctrine, executive appointment and removal power, the legislative veto as well as the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and other sources of law that regulate and structure the authority of agencies to determine the rights and responsibilities of the public.



    Credits: 3 to 4
  
  • LAW 6103 - Corporations


    This course considers the formation and operation of corporations and compares corporations to other business forms. It examines the roles and duties of those who control businesses and the power of investors to influence and litigate against those in control. The course also addresses the special problems of closely held corporations and issues arising out of mergers and attempts to acquire firms. The course uses both new tools derived from the corporate finance and related literature and traditional tools to explore a wide range of phenomena and transactions associated with the modern business enterprise.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6104 - Evidence


    The course will cover questions of relevance, hearsay, privilege, and expert testimony, among others, and it will focus largely on problems arising in concrete factual settings, as opposed to traditional case analysis. Major emphasis will be placed on the Federal Rules of Evidence, which now apply in the courts of roughly 40 states as well as the federal system.



    Credits: 3 to 4
  
  • LAW 6105 - Federal Courts


    This course is about the federal judicial system and its relationship to various other decision-makers, including Congress and the state courts. We will examine the jurisdiction of the federal courts; the elements of a justiciable case or controversy; the role of state law and so-called “federal common law” in federal courts; implied causes of action; and state sovereign immunity.



    Credits: 3 to 4
  
  • LAW 6106 - Federal Income Tax


    This course will concentrate on the provisions that apply to all taxpayers, with particular concern for the taxation of individuals. The course is intended to provide grounding in such fundamental areas as the concept of income, income exclusions and exemptions, non-business deductions, deductions for business expenses, basic tax accounting, assignment of income, and capital gains and losses.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6107 - International Law


    This is the introductory course in public (government-to-government) international law.  Topics include the International Court of Justice, the United Nations, recognition and statehood, diplomatic immunity, sovereign immunity, the law of the sea, torture, the Geneva and Hague Conventions, treaties, the European Union, and the World Trade Organization. 



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 6109 - Corporations (Law & Business)


    This course considers the formation and operation of corporations and will compare corporations to other business forms. It will examine the roles and duties of those who control businesses and the power of investors to influence and litigate against those in control. The course will also address the special problems of closely held corporations and issues arising out of mergers and attempts to acquire firms.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 6112 - Environmental Law


    In Environmental Law, we address pollution control under the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts as well as natural resource protection under the National Environmental Policy Act and Endangered Species Act. Although the primary focus will be on federal law, we will also explore some local, state and international dimensions.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7000 - Admiralty


    This course examines the basic substantive and procedural doctrines in federal admiralty law and compares them to analogous doctrines in other areas of law. Topics include: jurisdiction in admiralty, carriage of goods by sea, salvage, general average, collision, maritime torts for personal injury and death and environmental law on navigable waters.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7001 - Advanced Topics in the Law of War I & II (JAG)


    The course studies the law of war by considering and comparing U.S. and international perspectives on the law of war, including views of U.S. allies, the United Nations, the ICRC and NGOs. Topics include sources of contemporary law of war, the principles of the law of war and targeting, battlefield status, regulation of internal armed conflicts, human rights law, and enforcement mechanisms. 



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 7002 - Agency and Partnership


    This course deals with the agency relationship and its consequences, focusing on such topics as contractual authority, vicarious liability, and fiduciary obligation. Using litigated cases, students will learn how to help clients structure their affairs in a manner consistent with their business goals, including minimizing unwanted liability.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7003 - Alternative Dispute Resolution


    This course covers dispute resolution processes alternative to litigation, including negotiation, mediation, mini-trial, and others. Particular emphasis will be given to arbitration, its theoretical and statutory foundations, and its procedures.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 7004 - Analysis of the Military Criminal Legal System I & II (JAG)


    This course provides an in-depth critical examination of the military criminal legal system. A comparative and historical approach is used to explore the military justice system’s divided loyalty between constitutional safeguards and the military mission. Discussion of possible changes that might improve the system is encouraged.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 7005 - Antitrust


    This class studies American efforts to prevent the private subversion of free competition. In addition to analysis of the statutes and case law, students consider the history of antitrust regulation and the economic assumptions that drive much of its application.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7006 - Alternative Dispute Resolution: Negotiation and Mediation


    This course will explore a broad range of concepts in the study of alternatives to the litigation model of dispute resolution, with a strong emphasis on negotiation and mediation. The objective is for students to develop effective dispute resolution skills. Topics will include styles of handling conflict, ethics, influence of personality differences, and strategies for non-adversarial problem solving.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 7007 - Bankruptcy


    This course will explore in detail some of the legal, theoretical, and practical issues raised by a debtor’s financial distress. Principal emphasis will be on how the Federal Bankruptcy Code uses or displaces otherwise applicable law as the provider of rules that govern the relationships among debtors, creditors and others.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7008 - Bioethics and the Law


    This course explores the intersection among medicine, technology and the law. Topics may include human reproduction and birth, human genetics and the privacy and ownership of genetic information, death and dying, research involving human subjects, organ transplantation, and public health and bioterrorism.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7010 - Communications Law


    This course surveys the field of electronic communications. Major themes of the course include how to manage a “scarce” resource, the conflict between firms and between media, the conflict between competition and monopoly, the conflict between free speech and regulation, the conflict between self governance and regulation, and, the conflict between different regulators.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7011 - Comparative Constitutional Law


    The seminar will explore the issues entailed in the drafting and uses of a constitution. To what extent do constitutions reflect universal values (such as human rights), and to what extent are they grounded in the culture and values of a particular people? How much borrowing goes on in the writing of a constitution?



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7012 - Comparative Democratic Constitutionalism


    This course examines the constitutions and constitutional jurisprudence of the United States, Germany, Canada and South Africa. Students in this course will engage in comparative constitutional analysis, through study of relevant provisions of each nation’s constitution, as well as selected cases and secondary materials.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7013 - Complex Civil Litigation


    This course addresses the dramatic expansion of civil litigation in our society in recent years, and the accompanying development of new and often innovative procedural mechanisms for coping with that expansion. The class action will be given primary attention; other topics will include discovery, judicial control of complex cases, trial, and preclusion.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7014 - Conflict of Laws


    This course examines the rules and principles that govern the resolution of multi-jurisdictional conflicts of laws in the United States. The central issue throughout the course is, simply, what law governs a multi-jurisdictional dispute? It considers various theoretical bases for choice of law principles, as well as the principal constitutional limitations on choice of law.



    Credits: 2
  
  • LAW 7015 - Constitutional History I: American Revolution to 1896


    This course traces the history of American constitutional law development from the Articles of Confederation through the Civil War. Topics include the framing and ratification of the Constitution, the Alien and Sedition Acts, the landmark decisions of the Marshall Court, the constitutional ramifications of slavery, and various constitutional issues raised by the Civil War.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7016 - Constitutional History II: The Twentieth Century


    This course examines, from a historical perspective, constitutional developments from the enactment of the Civil War amendments to the Brown decision involving school desegregation.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7017 - Constitutional Law II: Church and State


    This course examines the two clauses in the Bill of Rights which define and safeguard religious freedom - the one barring laws “respecting an establishment of religion” and the other protecting the “free exercise of religion.”



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7018 - Criminal Adjudication


    This course looks at the way the judicial system operates once criminal charges are filed. Topics include bail and preventive detention, the right to the effective assistance of counsel, prosecutorial discretion and plea bargaining, the right to trial by jury, appeals from criminal convictions, and habeas corpus review.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7019 - Criminal Investigation


    This course examines the constitutional jurisprudence that regulates the government’s investigation of crime and apprehension of criminal suspects. In particular, the course will focus on the doctrines by which the judiciary polices the police, including the primary remedy (suppression of evidence) for police misconduct.



    Credits: 3
  
  • LAW 7020 - Disputes and Remedies I & II (JAG)


    This course focuses on contract litigation before the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, using an actual Army Contract Appeals Division case file as the basis for all graded and ungraded exercises. Course topics include jurisdiction, pleadings and motions, written discovery, depositions, hearings, brief writing, ADR and settlement agreements, and post-hearing procedures and appeals.



    Credits: 4
  
  • LAW 7021 - Duty to Obey


    This course examines debates concerning our (alleged) moral duty to obey the law, and, more generally, our “political obligations.” It explores the justifications that have been offered for the various kinds of legal disobedience. Readings are from contemporary sources in political philosophy and legal theory.



    Credits: 3
 

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