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Course Schedule

  • Full Grid
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    1826—1850 of 2527 classes match the current filters

    Classes Found

    Property

    Unique 28935
    5 hours
    • K. Haynes
    • MON, TUE, WED10:30 – 11:37 amTNH 3.124
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/15)
    Midterm exam (10/13)
    Fall 2022

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    580U

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 28940
    5 hours
    • M. Sturley
    • MON, TUE, WED10:30 – 11:37 amTNH 2.140
    • THU1:00 – 2:07 pmTNH 2.140
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/15)
    Other (12/13)
    Midterm exam (10/13)
    Fall 2022

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    580U

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 28540
    4 hours
    • K. Haynes
    • MON, TUE, WED10:30 – 11:37 amTNH 2.140
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (5/13)
    Midterm exam (3/8)
    Spring 2022

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 28545
    4 hours
    • J. Dzienkowski
    • MON2:20 – 3:27 pmTNH 2.139
    • TUE, WED2:20 – 3:27 pmTNH 2.140
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (5/13)
    Midterm exam (3/2)
    Spring 2022

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 29080
    4 hours
    • S. Johanson
    • MON, WED, THU10:30 – 11:37 amTNH 2.114
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/16)
    Fall 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in real and personal property interests recognzed by our legal system: estates in land and future interests, cotenancies, community propery, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, real estate contracts, and private and public control of land use--restrictive covenants and zoning regilations.

    Property

    Unique 29085
    5 hours
    • M. Sturley
    • MON, WED10:20 – 11:27 amTNH 2.140
    • TUE, THU9:00 – 10:07 amTNH 2.140
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/16)
    Fall 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    531

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 29090
    5 hours
    • M. Sturley
    • MON, WED9:00 – 10:07 amTNH 2.140
    • TUE, THU10:20 – 11:27 amTNH 2.140
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/16)
    Fall 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    531

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 29095
    5 hours
    • S. Morse
    • MON, TUE, WED, THU10:30 – 11:20 amTNH 3.124
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/16)
    Fall 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    531

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 28710
    4 hours
    • S. Johanson
    • TUE, WED, THU8:45 – 9:57 amTNH 2.137
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (5/14)
    Spring 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    This course will be taught in person but with the option of remote participation via Zoom.  Please note that this course might become online-only in the event that actual in-person attendance during the semester consistently falls below a threshold to be determined in the exercise of reasonable discretion by the instructor and the Student Affairs Office.

    A survey of interests in real and personal property interests recognzed by our legal system: estates in land and future interests, cotenancies, community propery, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, real estate contracts, and private and public control of land use--restrictive covenants and zoning regilations.

    Property

    Unique 28715
    4 hours
    • A. Kull
    • MON, WED, FRI8:30 – 9:42 amTNH 2.139
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (5/14)
    Spring 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    This course will be taught in person but with the option of remote participation via Zoom.  Please note that this course might become online-only in the event that actual in-person attendance during the semester consistently falls below a threshold to be determined in the exercise of reasonable discretion by the instructor and the Student Affairs Office.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 28720
    4 hours
    • M. Sturley
    • TUE, WED, THU, FRI8:45 – 9:57 amONLINE
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (5/14)
    Spring 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 27480
    4 hours
    • S. Morse
    • MON, TUE, WED, THU2:30 – 3:20 pmTNH 2.137
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/10)
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    The 27480 section of this course will be taught in person but with the option of occasional remote participation via Zoom.  If students require all remote participation, they must register for the 27481 section of this course, which is identical but web-based.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 27484
    4 hours
    • K. Haynes
    • TUE, WED, THU, FRI10:30 – 11:20 amTNH 2.137
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/14)
    Midterm exam (10/16)
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    431

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    The 27484 section of this course will be taught in person but with the option of occasional remote participation via Zoom.  If students require all remote participation, they must register for the   27483 section of this course, which is identical but web-based.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 27485
    5 hours
    • M. Sturley
    • MON, TUE, WED, THU9:10 – 10:00 amONLINE
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/14)
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    531

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Property

    Unique 27490
    5 hours
    • J. Dzienkowski
    • MON, TUE, WED, THU9:10 – 10:00 amONLINE
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/14)
    Midterm exam
    Paper
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    531

    Registration Information

    • 1L-only required

    Description

    This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.

    A survey of interests in land and limited topics involving chattels: estates, cotenancy, landlord and tenant issues, conveyancing, private and public control of land use.

    Psychedelics Law

    Unique 30814
    1 hour
    • S. Seder
    • C. Barnes
    • TUE3:55 – 5:45 pm
    P/F Not Allowed
    Eval:
    Early exam
    Fall 2025

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    196W
    Short course:
    8/25/25 — 10/7/25

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    Co-taught by Courtney Barnes.

    This course provides a comprehensive overview of federal, state, and local laws governing the possession, use, and administration of psychedelics. Students will gain a foundational understanding of the policy reform movements shaping psychedelic law across the country, with a comparative analysis of enacted and proposed legislation at various levels of government. The course will explore federally legal pathways for therapeutic participation, including ketamine treatment, drug development studies, and other research initiatives. Additionally, students will examine legal exemptions under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and related case law. Students will be expected to participate in discussion each week and in one group project taking place during class. This course has no textbook and no specific prerequisites. No technical background is required.

    Public Interest Constitutional Law: Suing the Federal Government

    Unique 29394
    1 hour
    • R. Henneke
    • C. Weldon
    • THU10:30 – 11:20 amJON 6.206
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Take-home exam 9-24 hrs (4/30)
    Spring 2025

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    196W

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    Taught by The Honorable Robert Henneke and Chance Weldon.

    This class will teach the elements of a federal complaint through the lens of public interest lawsuits versus the government. The goal is for students to be able to strategize a concept and draft a complaint against a federal agency that would meet the requirements to bring suit and survive a motion to dismiss.

    Public International Law

    Unique 30490
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • WED, THU2:30 – 3:45 pm
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/10)
    Fall 2025

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public International Law

    Unique 28910
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • TUE, WED1:05 – 2:20 pmJON 5.257
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (4/30)
    Spring 2025

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public International Law

    Unique 29205
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • TUE1:05 – 2:20 pmTNH 2.139
    • THU1:05 – 2:20 pmTNH 2.124
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Paper
    Fall 2023

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public International Law

    Unique 29040
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • WED12:50 – 2:05 pmTNH 2.139
    • THU2:15 – 3:30 pmTNH 2.140
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/10)
    Fall 2022

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public International Law

    Unique 29330
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • TUE, THU11:50 am – 1:05 pmTNH 2.140
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/11)
    Fall 2021

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public International Law

    Unique 28274
    3 hours
    • L. Fielder
    • TUE, THU2:40 – 3:55 pmONLINE
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/15)
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    382G

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will not use floating mean GPA

    Description

    This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.

    This course provides a basic introduction to public international law. It will survey the basic principles of international law including: the sources of international law; the law and interpretation of treaties; the relationship between international and domestic law; and jurisdictional competencies. It will also examine a number of specific subjects including: the use of force; human rights; humanitarian law; international criminal law; and terrorism.

    Public Lands, Water, and Wildlife Law

    Unique 30700
    3 hours
    • M. Taylor
    • MON, WED10:30 – 11:45 am
    P/F Allowed (JD only)
    Eval:
    Final exam (12/12)
    Midterm exam
    Fall 2025

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    391E-3

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective
    • Will use floating mean GPA if applicable

    Description

    This three-credit survey course focuses on the legal issues that pervade the conservation and regulation of public lands, wildlife, fisheries, and wetlands. These issues include, among others, competing claims of the "public interest" versus private property rights; the roles of administrative agencies and the judiciary in environmental decision making; tensions presented by the multiple use/sustainable yield standard in federal law; conflicts among and between local, state, and federal approaches to natural resource regulation; and the opposing goals of resource management espoused by fishermen, farmers, developers, environmentalists, and recreational users. These issues will be developed in the context of the regulatory schemes embodied in the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the Clean Water Act and the various statutes that govern federal public lands, such as the Wilderness Act and Federal Land Policy Management Act. The focus of the course is primarily U.S. law; however, it will touch on international law relevant to natural resources and, where appropriate, compare U.S. law to the laws of other countries.

    Race and the Constitution: The First Century 1787-1896

    Unique 28184
    1 hour
    • S. Levinson
    • MON4:15 – 5:55 pmONLINE
    P/F Mandatory
    Eval:
    Paper
    Fall 2020

    Course Information

    Course ID:
    179P
    Short course:
    8/31/20 — 10/19/20

    Registration Information

    • Upperclass-only elective

    Description

    This course will be taught entirely online via Zoom.

    What constitutes what might be termed “American constitutional identity”?  I.e., the Preamble speaks in the name of “We the People,” but who, exactly, constitute “the people” in whose name the Constitution is purportedly ordained?  Is there a single answer to that question, or, in fact, has that been an important controversy since 1787 (at least)?  The course will consist of close reading of some classic American texts, some of them cases, some of them not, such as the Declaration of Independence, Federalist #2, or a speech by Frederick Douglass.  Inevitably, the issue of race, within the United States, is inevitably intertwined with the reality of chattel slavery, legal until 1865 (save for some so-called “anti-slavery constitutionalists”), and succeeded thereafter by attempts to preserve white supremacy through, for example, racial segregation.  Thus the course will focus on the “first century” (broadly defined) of the Constitution from its formation and ratification in 1787-88 to Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896.

    The course will be shorter than usual, as is appropriate for a “reading course.”  Grades will be pass-fail.  There will be examination, though each of the students enrolled in the course will be expected to write three  “reaction papers” of approximately 500 words each to the readings assigned in any given week after the first.  What is most essential to the course, though, will be a willingness to engage in what might well be unusually intense discussion, given the continuing importance of the subject  What are the consequences, for example, of accepting William Lloyd Garrison’s view that the Constitution was a “covenant with death and an agreement with Hell”?  Does that mean, for example, that Dred Scott was basically “correct,” as against being the creation of essentially “rogue” judges.  To what extent were the Reconstruction Amendments clearly devoted to eliminating aspects of oppressive racialism (or even all reliance on racial categorization at all), at least as understood up to 1896?

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