Section Information
Section Description Provided by Instructor
This course is offered primarily to first year students as a spring term elective. Upper year students need special permission from the instructors. Students taking this course cannot also receive credit for L6222 Comparative Law.
Proctored final examination.
The first year of law school generally introduces students to basic principles of US law, including state and federal law. But in today's world, most lawyers practice law in multiple legal orders, including (in addition to domestic law) foreign law, regional law, and international law of multiple sources. In addition, comparative law is a powerful lens through which to appreciate and evaluate domestic law.
This course thus has both distinct objectives and a distinctive methodology.
The course's fundamental objective is to better prepare students for contemporary legal practice by introducing them to the basic issues and principles of international law (both public and private) and by equipping them with a keen comparative law perspective. In so doing, the course will explore both the special promise and the special challenges that these fields of law present.
The course is also distinct in methodology. It takes as its springboard a series of cases that have rich international or comparative law dimensions, but are also consciously modeled on concrete cases that students either encountered during the first semester (in contracts, torts, civil procedure, and legal methods), or are encountering concurrently in other second semester courses (in criminal law, property, and constitutional law).
The course will explore how these "internationalized" or "comparatavized" cases would be approached, not only in the US and/or under US law, but also in other jurisdictions around the world and/or under other bodies of law. We will endeavor to arrive at possible explanations for the differences observed -- explanations that may lie in legal rules, the operation of judicial and other institutions, or the political economy of other countries.
In short, the course aims to complement the basic domestic law orientation of the first year curriculum with distinctly international and comparative law knowledge and perspectives and to enable students to navigate multiple legal orders and to learn how they interface.
Semester
Spring 2012
Section
001
Schedule
TR 1:20p - 2:40p
Location
WJW L107
Points
3.0
Method of Evaluation
Exam
(Class)
J.D. Writing Credit
No
Course Limitations
Pre-requisite Courses
None
Co-requisite Courses
None
Recommended Courses
None
Other Limitations
This course is offered primarily to first year students as a spring term elective. Upper year students need special permission from the instructors. Students taking this course cannot also receive credit for L6222 Comparative Law.

