General Courses

LAW JD 962

21st Century Policing: Law and Policy

2 credits

This course considers emerging issues in the law and policy of policing. Policing is bounded by U.S. constitutional law but also heavily determined by state and local statutes and regulations. As such, policing traditionally engages legal questions such as search, seizure, interrogation, and identification. At the same time, emerging issues for contemporary police include policing a pandemic, historical injustice in policing, international and domestic terrorism, and gun violence on college campuses and universities. This course addresses many topics that have impacted police and communities since the first wave of protests in 2014–2015 through the murder of George Floyd through the lens of 4th, 5th, and 6th amendment issues. This course engages students in a deeper understanding of 21st century policing, drawing on contemporary developments in law and policy grounded in the realities of the experiences of police and communities.


FALL 2025: LAW JD 962 A1, Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Mon 4:20 pm 6:20 pm 2 Lowe LAW 413
LAW JD 993

Capital Punishment in the United States

3 credits

Capital punishment is still implemented by the federal government and several states within the United States. This seminar will broadly examine the topic of capital punishment. Specific topics will likely include: morality and history of the death penalty; procedural path of a capital case from trial through initial appeal, habeas, and requests for clemency; statutes and cases that arose from the Supreme Court's decision in Furman v. Georgia; sentencing and mitigating/aggravating factors analyzed by juries when deciding capital cases; role of judges, juries, prosecutors, and defense attorneys in death penalty trials; and the impact of race, economic status, mental health, competency, and gender on whether a death sentence is issued. Students will engage in discussion and reflection and will also write an extensive paper (that can partially satisfy the upper-level writing requirement) and do a formal oral presentation of their paper topic for the class. NOTE: The material in this course can be graphic and emotionally challenging, but it is nonetheless required. Students will not be excused from any assigned topic. Therefore, all students should carefully gauge their tolerance for this difficult material before choosing to take this class. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: All students are able to use this class to partially satisfy the requirement and a limited number of students may use this class to fully satisfy the requirement. **A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar, or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, may be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who are on a wait list for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.


LAW JD 681

Challenging Carceral Feminism: Criminalization of Violence Against Women

3 credits

This seminar is aimed at giving the students an overview of feminist approaches to criminal law, with emphasis on the feminist projects of criminalising violence against women. By mapping the extensive points of contact between feminist groups and the state on the questions of rape, sexual harassment, domestic violence, trafficking, and child sexual abuse, the seminar is geared towards critically evaluating the upsides and downsides of such engagement. Besides focus on American domestic criminal law, the seminar will also look at similar issues in other jurisdictions, particularly in the Global South. The seminar will also touch upon feminist interventions in international criminal law to address war-time rape. Further, the course will introduce students to arguments of abolition feminism and other forms of anti-carceral scholarship. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: Students may use this class to satisfy the requirement with a 6,000 word research paper. **A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar, or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, may be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who are on a wait list for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.


LAW JD 811

Family Law

3 credits

This course offers a survey of family law, including case law, statutory law, and the role of constitutional rights in limiting governmental regulation of the family. This course will introduce students to law concerning a basic social institution: the family. Students will gain knowledge about how family law intersects with many other fields of law, such as contracts, constitutional law, criminal law, property, torts, public and social welfare law, as well as how social science informs family law. The course will focus on marriage (including the recognition of same-sex marriage), nonmarital families, divorce, pathways to becoming a parent, and the parent-child relationship. Topics include defining and regulating marriage; formal marriage; common law marriage; nonmarital couples, cohabitation, and alternatives to marriage; common law incidents of marriage and the transformation of the common law; domestic violence; traditional and "no fault" divorce; property division; spousal support; child support; child custody; adoption; and regulating parenthood. There will be a final examination. The teaching method is a combination of lecture and class discussion, along with in-class small group problem-solving exercises. GRADING NOTICE: This class does not offer the CR/NC/H option.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 811 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue,Thu 11:00 am 12:25 pm 3 Katharine B. Silbaugh
LAW JD 798

Gender, Violence and the Law

3 credits

This seminar provides a detailed examination of gender-motivated violence and legal responses. Recently, there has been greater recognition of gender-based injuries within the law and the provision of new, important protections to survivors. However, despite considerable progress, gender-based violence continues to present theoretical and practical questions, such as: To what extent is gender-based violence different than other types of violence? What legal approaches are most effective to address the harms while recognizing that the diverse interests of survivors? How do societal norms related to gender-based violence impact legal remedies? How should courts balance the interests of other parties in such proceedings to ensure that constitutional rights remain intact? This seminar will explore the limits of the law in addressing gender-based violence and emerging non-traditional approaches, including problem-solving courts and restorative justice frameworks. It also will examine how the emergence of the #MeToo movement may influence legal responses to gender-based violence. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: A limited number of students may use this class to satisfy the requirement.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 798 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue 10:40 am 12:40 pm 3 Naomi M. Mann
LAW JD 950

HOMICIDE INVESTIGATIONS & TRIALS

3 credits

This seminar will focus upon the substantive law of homicide, as well as the practical aspects of actual homicide investigations and trials: crime scene interpretation; DNA analysis; autopsies and related forensic evidence; expert testimony, particularly in the area of psychiatry and criminal responsibility; jury considerations; ethical concerns; and the role of the media. Students will have the opportunity to study actual murder cases, visit local crime laboratories and courtrooms, and learn prosecution, defense, and judicial perspectives on various contemporary issues arising in murder investigations and trials. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: This class may not be used to satisfy the requirement. OFFERING PATTERN: This class is not offered every year. Students are advised to take this into account when planning their long-term schedule. ** A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar, or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, will be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who waitlist for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 950 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue 4:20 pm 6:20 pm 3 Christina Pujals Ronan
LAW JD 806

Prosecutorial Ethics

3 credits

Former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson once noted, "The prosecutor has more control over life, liberty, and reputation than any other person in America." This seminar examines the unique role and power of prosecutors and their responsibility to ensure "that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer." We will study the ways in which prosecutors exercise their broad discretion and the ethical and practical considerations that affect those determinations. What duty does the prosecutor owe to a victim? To the police? To the public at large? How might those parties' interests conflict with a prosecutor's objectives and impact prosecutorial decisions? A major focus of this course will be the prosecutor's obligations to the accused and the various ways in which those duties are breached. We will examine the consequences of prosecutorial misconduct, the ways in which it may or may not be remedied, and to what extent it can be deterred. Other topics to be covered include the relationship between the prosecutor and the grand jury, conflicts of interest, selective prosecution, trial misconduct, prosecutorial immunity, mandatory minimum sentences, the use of confidential informants and cooperating witnesses, discovery of exculpatory evidence, post-conviction obligations, and wrongful convictions. Our study will draw heavily from historical as well as current events, and will include emphasis on the ways in which the role of the prosecutor is shifting. Students will engage in mock disciplinary hearings, playing the role of bar counsel in bringing allegations of misconduct against prosecutors or defending them against such claims. NOTE: seminar satisfies the Professional Responsibility requirement. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: This class may not be used to satisfy the requirement. RECOMMENDED COURSE: Criminal Procedure, taken either prior to or concurrently with this seminar. GRADING NOTICE: This course does not offer the CR/NC/H option. ** A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar (designated by an (S) in the title), or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, may be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who are on a wait list for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 806 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Mon 2:10 pm 4:10 pm 3 Brian A. Wilson