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Oct 31, 2024
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2018-2019 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Legal Studies Minor
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Return to: Undergraduate & Graduate Programs
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Program Learning Outcomes
Students will be able to:
- analyze the interdisciplinary literature on justice, law and American society, emphasizing political questions and social science methods and theories; assess the interdisciplinary literature on international law, human rights and global politics, emphasizing political questions and social science methods/theories; and understand the meaning/origins of international human rights norms/standards
- understand the structure of the American legal system, including the court system, and criminal and civil justice systems, and be able to describe the political economy and organizational structure of judicial decision-making, using tools of social science analysis
- understand the structure of the international human rights legal system, including governmental and non-governmental institutions on the global, national, and local levels, and be able to describe the political economy and organizational structure of human rights decision making, using tools of social science analysis
- use tools of legal analysis and argumentation to address political controversies and social conflicts in American society, and human rights controversies, such as terrorism, humanitarian intervention, cultural imperialism, & U.S. foreign policy
Minor Requirements (20 Units)
Required Electives (12 Units)
Choose one course from each of the following elective areas:
Field Placement (4 Units)
Students must choose between a law-related placement in a government agency ( ) or in some non-governmental organization ( or ).
Electives (4 Units)
The elective can be satisfied preferably by choosing an additional course in either Domestic Justice or Global Justice, or by choosing a course from additional electives.
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Return to: Undergraduate & Graduate Programs
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