Strategic International Commercial Transactions
Course Information
- Course Number
- L9303-LEC
- Curriculum Level
- Upperclass
- Areas of Study
- Commercial Law and Transactions, Corporate Law, Business, and Finance, International and Comparative Law
- Type
- Lecture
Section 001 Information
Instructor
Section Description
This course is designed to introduce the student to several of the most frequently encountered types of strategic international business arrangements -- including mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and strategic alliances, project finance, intellectual property licensing, and international private equity and venture capital transactions. We will compare and contrast deal elements common to international transactions of varying types. In addition, we will look at how specific elements of the U.S. regulatory environment and foreign regulatory environments affect international transactions and will consider what kinds of barriers -- legal, financial, cultural, commercial, practical, and ethical -- businesses face in cross-border deals. What are the elements which make a transaction truly international? How do international transactions differ from purely domestic ones? What is the role of the lawyer in international transactions? This course is targeted to JD, LLM, and MBA students who are interested in learning more about international corporate law and business. We will be taking a decidedly hands on, practical approach, which will include close scrutiny and examination of actual deal agreements and related documents. The class is a basic, survey-style course, intended as an introduction to the world of international deal-making for the relatively uninitiated -- students with significant deal-making experience may find it insufficiently challenging. Students will be responsible for reading assignments, class participation, and preparation of an 8-10 page mid-term take-home client memo. In lieu of a final exam, all students will be expected to prepare, individually, a 25-30 page research paper on a topic of international business law as agreed upon with the instructor. A select number of students will have the opportunity to present the results of their research to the class in an oral presentation. JD minor writing credit granted upon completion. LLM writing credit granted upon completion.
We will be following a modified and accelerated Monday/Wednesday evening schedule, as follows: On each date, class will be held from 6:20 pm to 8:30 pm:
Monday, January 22nd
Wednesday, January 24th
Monday, January 29th
Wednesday, January 31st
Monday February 26th
Wednesday, February 28th
Monday, April 1st
Wednesday, April 3rd
Monday, April 8th
Wednesday, April 10th
Monday, April 15th
Wednesday, April 17th
Reading Materials: Various handouts, articles, sample agreements and other documents to be made available by the Instructor.
Waitlisted students will be selected by Professor Vecchio.
- School Year & Semester
- Spring 2024
- Dates
- January 22 - January 26
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Dates
- January 29 - February 2
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Dates
- February 26 - March 1
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Dates
- April 1 - April 5
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Dates
- April 8 - April 12
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Dates
- April 15 - April 19
- Location
- JGH 107
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Points
- 2
- Method of Evaluation
- Paper
- J.D Writing Credit?
- Minor (automatic)
- LLM Writing Project
- Automatic
- Writing Credit Note
- LLM Writing Project credit granted upon completion.
Learning Outcomes
- Primary
-
- Gain a better understanding of the practical aspects of international business law.
- Learn to differentiate important from less important issues in connection with international business transactions.
- Understand the similarities and differences between different types of international commercial transactions.
- Gain an appreciation for the breadth and variety of cross-border transaction types.
- Gain familiarity with certain basic differences between civil law systems and common law systems.
- Develop sensitivity for different international approaches to commercial relations and investment activities.
- Develop experience in drafting "executive" style written memoranda.
- Gain in-depth knowledge of a discreet area of international business law through research and writing.
- Develop sensitivity for effective communication with lawyers and business people from different cultural and legal backgrounds.
Course Limitations
- Instructor Pre-requisites
- None
- Instructor Co-Requisites
- None
- Requires Permission
- No
- Recommended Courses
- None
- Other Limitations
- None