Course Schedule
Classes Found
Legal Analysis and Communication
- E. Youngdale
- MON 8:50 – 9:57 am TNH 2.124
- TUE 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- TUE 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 10:00 – 11:07 am TNH 2.123
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- WED 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 11:30 am – 12:37 pm TNH 3.124
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- TUE 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 10:00 – 11:07 am TNH 3.124
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- WED 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 11:30 am – 12:37 pm TNH 2.124
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- E. Youngdale
- MON 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 2.124
- WED 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- WED 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 11:30 am – 12:37 pm TNH 2.123
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- MON 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- WED 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- WED 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 11:30 am – 12:37 pm TNH 3.125
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- MON 8:50 – 9:57 am TNH 2.139
- TUE 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- MON 10:30 – 11:37 am TNH 2.140
- WED 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- TUE 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 10:00 – 11:07 am TNH 2.124
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- MON 8:50 – 9:57 am ONLINE
- TUE 1:10 – 2:17 pm ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Legal Analysis and Communication
- TUE 10:30 – 11:37 am ONLINE
- FRI 10:00 – 11:07 am TNH 3.125
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 332R
- Experiential learning credit:
- 3 hours
Registration Information
- 1L-only required
Description
This course will be taught in person on some days (with remote participation via Zoom permitted) but online via Zoom on others.
Introduction to problem-solving through law-practice simulation. Focuses on legal research, writing mechanics, predictive written analysis, and oral presentation of research results.
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 195S
- Short course:
- 8/29/24 — 10/10/24
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
Legal English is a short course (7-weeks) and is restricted to LL.M. students. The course will cover oral Legal English.
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 195S
- Short course:
- 8/24/23 — 10/5/23
Registration Information
- Upperclass-only elective
Description
Legal English is a short course (7-weeks) and is restricted to LL.M. students. The course will cover oral Legal English.
Legal English
- MON, WED 2:00 – 3:00 pm JON 6.201
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 195S
- Short course:
- 8/25/22 — 10/6/22
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
Legal English is a short course (7-weeks) and is restricted to LL.M. students. The course will cover oral Legal English.
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 195S
- Short course:
- 8/26/21 — 10/7/21
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
Same as LAW 179P, Legal English.
Legal English is a course restricted to LL.M. students. The course will cover oral Legal English in conjunction with the Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers course. Concurrent registration is required in Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers, 29675.
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 179P
- Short course:
- 1/28/21 — 3/11/21
Registration Information
- Upperclass-only elective
Description
This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.
Legal English is a course restricted to LL.M. students. The course will cover oral Legal English in conjunction with the Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers course.
Legal Liberalism
- MON, WED 10:30 – 11:20 am ONLINE
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 296W
Registration Information
- 1L and upperclass elective
- Will use floating mean GPA if applicable
Description
This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.
In my usage, “legal liberalism” refers to a jurisprudential position on the content and structure of valid legal argument in a society that is committed to instantiating a liberal conception of justice. I believe that the United State is such a society, know that post-World-War-II Germany is such a society, and think that many other countries are so as well. Legal liberalism claims that in such societies arguments that examine the concrete extensions of liberalism (of its placing a lexically-highest value on those moral-rights bearers for whom it is responsible being treated with appropriate, equal respect and concern) are not only generically legally valid but are dominant. Such arguments are dominant in the sense that (1) they control both the legal validity of other modes of argument that legal actors have used to identify the answer to legal-rights questions that are correct, not incorrect, or wrong as a matter of law and the variants of these other modes of legal argument that are valid and (2) with one limited exception, they determine the answer to any legal-rights question to which they are applicable that is correct as a matter of law.
The course will begin by discussing various moral concepts and delineating two philosophically-informed empirical protocols for identifying respectively the moral category to which a particular society belongs and the moral norm to whose instantiation a particular society of moral integrity is committed. It will then consider the abstract definition and extensions of liberalism and various non-liberal conceptions of the moral good. After that, the course will examine the implications of liberalism for the resolution of various contract-law, tort-law, property-law, civil-procedure-law, antitrust-law, and constitutional-law issues in a liberal-moral-rights-based-society. It will also address various alternative positions on the content and structure of valid legal argument in the U.S. that have been taken by U.S. legal scholars and judges.
Course grades will primarily be based on a paper that students will have to submit by the end of the exam period. That paper can either (1) analyze in detail the jurisprudential assumptions that teachers of other courses they have taken were making and/or that the authors of the textbooks that were used in other courses they took were making or (2) address some other course-relevant issue or set of issues. In the latter case, the student will have to secure advanced approval of the proposed paper from the Lecturer. The Lecturer may revise upward the grade of any student whose class-participation was particularly valuable.
Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers
- FRI 9:50 – 11:40 am TNH 3.124
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 295Q
- Short course:
- 8/30/24 — 11/22/24
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
This course will introduce foreign lawyers to the case-law method, the basic tools for conducting legal research, and the basic conventions and expectations for creating professional legal work product. This course focuses on legal document drafting. It does not focus on legal academic works, such as research articles. The multiple research and writing assignments will build on each other, culminating in full-length, formal analytical memorandums that could potentially serve as professional writing samples. The course will assist with the critical-thinking and writing skills that are foundational to American academic endeavors as well as law practice.
This course fulfills the New York Bar Exam requirement Rule 520.6(3)(vi)(b) and Texas Bar Exam requirement under Rule 13 Sec. 9(a)(7)(B).
Graded pass/fail.
Restricted to LL.M. students who do not have a U.S. J.D. degree.
Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers
- C. Toepke
- FRI 9:50 – 11:40 am TNH 3.126
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 295Q
- Short course:
- 8/25/23 — 11/17/23
Registration Information
- Upperclass-only elective
Description
This course will introduce foreign lawyers to the case-law method, the basic tools for conducting legal research, and the basic conventions and expectations for creating professional legal work product. This course focuses on legal document drafting. It does not focus on legal academic works, such as research articles. The multiple research and writing assignments will build on each other, culminating in full-length, formal analytical memorandums that could potentially serve as professional writing samples. The course will assist with the critical-thinking and writing skills that are foundational to American academic endeavors as well as law practice.
This course fulfills the New York Bar Exam requirement Rule 520.6(3)(vi)(b) and Texas Bar Exam requirement under Rule 13 Sec. 9(a)(7)(B).
Graded pass/fail.
Restricted to LL.M. students who do not have a U.S. J.D. degree.
Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers
- C. Toepke
- FRI 9:45 – 11:53 am TNH 3.126
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 295Q
- Short course:
- 8/26/22 — 11/4/22
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
This course will introduce foreign lawyers to the case-law method, the basic tools for conducting legal research, and the basic conventions and expectations for creating professional legal work product. This course focuses on legal document drafting. It does not focus on legal academic works, such as research articles. The multiple research and writing assignments will build on each other, culminating in full-length, formal analytical memorandums that could potentially serve as professional writing samples. The course will assist with the critical-thinking and writing skills that are foundational to American academic endeavors as well as law practice.
This course fulfills the New York Bar Exam requirement Rule 520.6(3)(vi)(b) and Texas Bar Exam requirement under XIII Sec. 8(a)(7)(B).
Graded pass/fail.
Restricted to LL.M. students who do not have a U.S. J.D. degree.
Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers
- C. Toepke
- FRI 9:45 – 11:53 am TNH 2.137
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 295Q
- Short course:
- 9/10/21 — 11/19/21
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
Description
Same as LAW 279M, Topic: Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers.
This course will introduce foreign lawyers to the case-law method, the basic tools for conducting legal research, and the basic conventions and expectations for creating professional legal work product. This course focuses on legal document drafting. It does not focus on legal academic works, such as research articles. The multiple research and writing assignments will build on each other, culminating in full-length, formal analytical memorandums that could potentially serve as professional writing samples. The course will assist with the critical-thinking and writing skills that are foundational to American academic endeavors as well as law practice.
This course fulfills the New York Bar Exam requirement Rule 520.6(3)(vi)(b) and Texas Bar Exam requirement under XIII Sec. 8(a)(7)(B).
Graded pass/fail.
Restricted to LL.M. students who do not have a U.S. J.D. degree.
Legal Research and Writing for Foreign Lawyers
- C. Toepke
- THU 6:25 – 8:15 pm TNH 2.123
Course Information
- Course ID:
- 232Q
- Short course:
- 1/28/21 — 4/22/21
Registration Information
- LLM degree course only
- Prof. keeps own waitlist
Description
One section of this course will be taught in person but with the option of occasional remote participation via Zoom.
This course will introduce foreign lawyers to the case-law method, the basic tools for conducting legal research, and the basic conventions and expectations for creating professional legal work product. This course focuses on legal document drafting. It does not focus on legal academic works, such as research articles. The multiple research and writing assignments will build on each other, culminating in full-length, formal analytical memorandums that could potentially serve as professional writing samples. The course will assist with the critical-thinking and writing skills that are foundational to American academic endeavors as well as law practice.
This course fulfills the New York Bar Exam requirement Rule 520.6(3)(vi)(b) and Texas Bar Exam requirement under XIII Sec. 8(a)(7)(B).
Graded pass/fail.
Restricted to LL.M. students who do not have a U.S. J.D. degree.