Section Information
Section Description Provided by Instructor
1) Course open to all students, including students from other disciplines.
2) Exam (open book/take home with 10-12 page limit) or paper (10-15 page limit) option.
3) Minor writing credit available.
PLEASE NOTE, the first meeting of this seminar will take place Tuesday, September 7 at 7:00 PM in GRHL 546. The class scheduled for Monday, September 13 is cancelled, and the second class will be at its regularly-scheduled time of 9:10 AM on Monday, September 20.
A study of the delicate balance between civil liberties and government benevolence. Beginning with Buck v. Bell and concluding with surrogate decision making and the "right to die," the course will explore such issues as involuntary civil commitment, the rights of the homeless mentally ill, the propriety of psychiatric predictions of violent behavior in death penalty cases, the right to treatment, the right to refuse treatment, the regulation of experimental treatment, and, time permitting, assisted suicide. Although there is some discussion of mental disability cases involving the death penalty and incompetency to stand trial, the course focuses primarily on civil rather than criminal law issues. For those who are interested, there may also be an opportunity to examine international human rights issues as they relate to mental disabilities. Students have the option of writing a paper or completing a take-home examination and will attend a court hearing.
Semester
Fall 2010
Section
001
Schedule
M 9:10a - 11:00a
Location
JGH 502
Points
2.0
Method of Evaluation
Paper and Exam
(Home)
J.D. Writing Credit
Minor (automatic)
Course Limitations
Pre-requisite Courses
None
Co-requisite Courses
None
Recommended Courses
constitutional law helpful but not required
Other Limitations
None
Learning Outcome Goals
No learning outcome goals have been provided.
