Constitutional Law
Course Information
- Course Number
 - L6133
 
- Curriculum Level
 - Foundation
 
- Areas of Study
 - Constitutional Law
 
- Type
 - Lecture
 
Section 002 Information
Instructor
    Mark Barenberg
      
      Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law
    
  Section Description
This is the basic course in Constitutional law, a foundation for more specialized courses on the Constitution and for public law courses generally. The course explores: the major justifications for establishing political structures and individual rights by means of a written Constitution; alternative methods and strategies of Constitutional interpretation; judicial review, and its legal and political significance; the federal system, the growth of national power and of limitations on state authority, and the resurgence in judicial protection of state power; the separation of powers and checks and balances among major branches of the federal government; and the theory and content of individual rights under the Constitution, including the development of several principal rights by Constitutional amendment and judicial interpretation.
- School Year & Semester
 - Fall 2025
 
- Points
 - 4
 
- Method of Evaluation
 - Exam
 
- J.D Writing Credit?
 - No
 
Learning Outcomes
- Primary
 - 
                      
- At the end of the course, students will have acquired understanding of and/or facility in a specific body of law, including major policy concerns
 - At the end of the course, students will have acquired understanding of and/or facility in doctrinal analysis, including close reading of cases and precedents, and application to facts
 - At the end of the course, students will have acquired understanding of and/or facility in jurisprudential considerations in legal analysis
 
 
Course Limitations
- Instructor Pre-requisites
 - None
 
- Instructor Co-Requisites
 - None
 
- Requires Permission
 - No
 
- Recommended Courses
 - None
 
- Other Limitations
 - None