Supreme Court (B)

Course Information

Registration Information

Meeting Times

Day Time Location
TUE 1:15 - 2:55 pm TNH 3.129

Evaluation Method

Type Date Time Location
None

Description

Weinberg, SUPREME COURT SEMINAR B, FALL 2018 (Two hours) This is the traditional two-hour non-writing Supreme Court Seminar famously originated here by the late Charles Alan Wright.  (It is the same course as the Supreme Court course -- same teacher, same hour, same comfortable windowed seminar room, same syllabus -- but meeting on Tuesdays instead of Mondays.)  Students participate as Justices of the United States Supreme Court, although no actual role playing is involved. In the week before each “judicial conference,” students do their own “clerking,” preparing for discussion of an actual case currently on certiorari before the Supreme Court. At the "judicial conferences," the “Justices” present their individual views of how the case before them should be decided, supporting their positions with arguments based on their researches. They thrash out the issues freely, trying to achieve a majority for decision of the case. The seminar offers an introduction to interesting areas of federal law, exposure to some of the Court's more important current cases, and acquaintance with actual professional materials of national importance, while providing experience in analysis of legal issues through focused lawyerly argument, and training in confident and effective legal argument.  Because the seminar presumes completion of the first year of law school, it is open to upperclass students only, and only those who have completed a basic course in Constitutional Law, in Torts, and in Criminal Law.  Enrollment is limited by the seating capacity of our seminar room, but the course is open to all upperclass first comers. There is no pass/fail option.  Students eager to participate who find the course closed are advised to try registering for the Monday class instead.  If that, too, is closed, it can help to get on the Registrar's wait lists.  This course may be taken repeatedly, because the cases are different each time it is offered, depending as they do on the Supreme Court's docket.  Two hours.

Textbooks ( * denotes required )

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Important Class Changes

Date Updated
08/17/2018 Course title updated