Public International Law Courses

LAW JD 680

Food Law

3 credits

This is an introductory survey course in food law. We will discuss a range of issues impacting the food system from farm to table including health and safety, transparency and choice, food exceptionalism, and food justice. We will discuss these issues through an in-depth exploration into the history, development, and enforcement of major federal food statutes and regulations, with emphasis on the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) and the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).


LAW JD 996

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW

3 credits

This class will focus chiefly on the crimes for which individuals incur criminal liability directly under contemporary international law. We will cover, in particular, (i) what crimes qualify as international in this sense, general principles of international criminal jurisdiction and immunities, and the historical evolution of the field from its genesis after World War I to Nuremberg to the permanent International Criminal Court established in 2002; (ii) treaty provisions, statutes, and tribunal jurisprudence defining the nature and scope of liability for core international crimes, viz., genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes; (iii) modern debates over other, and at times more controversial, international crimes, such as torture and CIDT, as well as the crime of aggression; (iv) the minimal requirements and forms of individual criminal responsibility under international law; and (v) selected special topics, including the principle of legality, head of state immunity, and crimes of sexual violence. LIMITED WRITING REQUIREMENT OPTION: A limited number of students will be permitted to satisfy the upper-class writing requirement with this seminar after consultation with the instructor. ** 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 748

International Economic Law and Climate Change

3 credits

The aim of this class is to provide an overview of how international environmental commitments and international economic commitments fit together within the global economic governance architecture. Students will explore the history of today's international climate movement, beginning with the 1992 Earth Summit (Rio) and covering the most recent commitments made under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. They will explore the parallel way in which international trade and investment commitments have intensified during that time period, and the course will layout the various efforts by global leaders to harmonize the two (economic and environmental) regimes. The course includes topics such as (1) environmental disputes at the World Trade Organization, (2) investor-state dispute settlement targeting environmental and climate policies, (3) efforts at the bilateral, regional and mega-regional level to incorporate environmental commitments into free trade agreements, (4) unilateral efforts by the EU and the US to promote climate-friendly policy-making worldwide and (5) developing country perspectives in the "just transition" movement. By the end of the course, students will have a comprehensive understanding of the points of harmony and tension between these two regimes and will have thought critically and creatively about the ways forward. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: A limited number of students may use this class to 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.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 748 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Wed 8:30 am 10:30 am 3 Rachel Thrasher
LAW TX 958

International Estate Planning

2 credits

The course will cover international estate planning from two perspectives: (1) U.S. citizens residing outside of the U.S. or owning assets located outside of the U.S.; and (2) foreign citizens residing in the U.S. or transferring assets in or to the U.S. U.S. gift and estate tax laws applicable to both situations will be studied in depth in a practice-oriented manner. Planning techniques and vehicles utilized in international estate planning will be explored, in particular trusts and the special U.S. income tax rules applicable to foreign trusts with U.S. beneficiaries and off-shore U.S.-grantor trusts. The impact of non-U.S. transfer taxes and tax treaties will be considered, as well as non-tax foreign laws impacting on international estate planning. The course will also cover the U.S. tax and estate planning issues applicable to "mixed marriages" where one spouse is a U.S. citizen and the other is a non-U.S. citizen, and multi-jurisdiction situations of gifts or bequests from non-U.S. donors or decedents to U.S. beneficiaries. Finally, the course will also consider cultural and ethical issues peculiar to the area of international estate planning. Prerequisite or corequisite: Estate and Gift Tax, Estate Planning


LAW JD 840

International Human Rights Clinic: Skills 1

3 credits

THIS CLASS IS RESTRICTED to students who have formally applied to and been accepted to the International Human Rights Clinic. This course is the companion fall classroom component for students enrolled in the Clinic and provides an introduction to essential lawyering skills, with a focus on those relevant to the practice of human rights law. The goal of the course is to help students develop a wide range of competencies, including written and oral communication and advocacy, legal research, factual investigation, witness interviewing, professional responsibility, and strategic thinking and problem-solving. NOTE: This course counts towards the 6 credit Experiential Learning requirement. GRADING NOTICE: This course does not offer the CR/NC/H option.


FALL 2025: LAW JD 840 A1, Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Wed 2:10 pm 4:10 pm 3 Susan M. Akram LAW 702
LAW JD 927

International Law

4 credits

Sloane: This course will offer a survey of contemporary international law. We will consider both the classical law of nations and postwar developments, which have shifted the fulcrum of the international legal system from a relatively exclusive focus on the rights and duties of states inter se (as between themselves) to a broader focus on all of the participants in the contemporary international legal process—not only nation-states. Nation-states remain the chief actor in international law, but since the nineteenth-century, the amount and more frequent resort to law has led to both new substantive norms (doctrinally) and many new institutions and participants that’re also subject to international law, e.g., non-governmental organizations (NGOs), multinational enterprises of all kinds (MNEs), terrorist networks, criminal syndicates, and, above all, individuals, which in turn has led to int’l law’s effort to create and abide by a specific set of human rights. Specific topics may include (1) the history, nature, and sources of international law; (2) the establishment, transformation, and termination of states and other international legal participants; (3) national incorporation of international law, with a focus on core concepts of U.S. foreign relations law; (4) international law’s allocation of jurisdiction to make and apply law, as well as selected immunities conferred by international law; (5) international law’s effort to protect human dignity through fields such as international human rights, the law of war, and international criminal law; (6) control and regulation of the resources of the planet, with a focus on the law of the sea as a prominent example; and (7) the use of force. George: This course will offer a basic survey of contemporary international law. It will teach students about the major issues of public international law and policy that influence current events, with an eye to both legal theory and modern legal practice. Specific topics will include: (i) the history, theory, and nature of international law; (ii) the sources of international law; (iii) the "actors" of international law -- states, international organizations (with emphasis on the U.N. system); (iv) the domestic incorporation of international law, with a focus on key concepts of U.S. foreign relations law; (v) international human rights; (vi) the use of force; and (vii) humanitarian law.


FALL 2025: LAW JD 927 A1, Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue,Thu 4:20 pm 6:20 pm 4 Robert D. Sloane LAW 212
SPRG 2026: LAW JD 927 B1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue,Thu 8:30 am 10:30 am 4 Erika George
LAW JD 707

International Law Research

1 credits

An important component of understanding international law is mastering all the diverse sources of this area of law. Students will learn to navigate the international system as well as the relevant primary sources of law. Students will learn research strategies and skills for locating treaties, decisions of international tribunals, documents of international organizations and other sources of state practice. Among the organizations the course will discuss the United Nations, the OAS, the EU and the WTO. In addition, students will be introduced to strategies for researching the law of foreign jurisdictions. Students will gain hands-on experience in answering legal research questions in the area of international and comparative law. Classes will combine instruction and hands-on exercises using major print, electronic, and web based resources for international law research. NOTE: This class counts toward the 6 credit Experiential Learning requirement. ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENT: A student who fails to attend the first class or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, will be administratively dropped from the class. Students who are on the wait list are required to attend the first meeting to be considered for enrollment.


FALL 2025: LAW JD 707 A1, Sep 2nd to Oct 17th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Thu 2:10 pm 4:10 pm 1 Stefanie B. WeigmannBlack LAW 416
FALL 2025: LAW JD 707 B1, Sep 2nd to Oct 17th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Fri 10:30 am 12:30 pm 1 Stefanie B. Weigmann LAW 204
LAW JD 697

International Law, Justice, and the Politics of Armed Conflict

3 credits

This course examines the application of international law to situations of armed conflict. The first part of the course provides a theoretical and historical background regarding international law governing the use of force, looking first at debates over the role and effectiveness of international law in international relations, turning to questions about how international law seeks to regulate the use of force in the international system and the extent to which actors comply with their obligations under international law. The second part of the course focuses on international humanitarian law, examining different forms of humanitarian law violations, considering how international humanitarian law affects the behavior of governments and non-state actors during conflict, and discussing why governments and non-state actors often fail to abide by international humanitarian law. In this section, we will also pay particular attention to specific cases of armed conflict – both interstate conflicts such as the war between Russia and Ukraine and civil conflicts such as Libya, Rwanda, and Syria. The last section of the course considers questions about the enforcement of international humanitarian law and attempts to secure justice for violations of international law, including discussions of ad-hoc international criminal tribunals, the International Criminal Court, and efforts to hold individuals accountable for atrocity crimes in domestic courts.


FALL 2025: LAW JD 697 A1, Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Tue,Thu 2:15 pm 3:40 pm 3 Jessica A. Stanton LAW 203
LAW JD 858

International Trade Regulation

3 credits

This course focuses on the law governing international trade, including both the law established by the World Trade Organization and relevant U.S. laws. This will include an in-depth analysis of the treaties, regulations, and case law that govern international trade. The course will cover the basic principles and mechanisms of international trade law, including most-favored-nation (MFN), national treatment, dispute settlement, as well as relevant laws in different substantive areas such as tariffs, quotas, services, intellectual property, and trade remedies. The course will also examine the political economy of international trade relations, including how economic and political forces have shaped current regulatory policies and may shape future policies.


LAW JD 979

Law & Ethics of War

3 credits

This seminar will critically examine the legal doctrines and ethical principles of the contemporary law of war, including both the law governing recourse to force (jus ad bellum) and the law governing the conduct of hostilities (jus in bello). Topics vary from year to year. But we’ll cover most if not all of the following: the U.N. Charter framework for collective force; the nature and scope of the inherent right to self-defense; challenges to the jus ad bellum framework posed by terrorist networks and other non-state belligerents; humanitarian intervention; the core rules and principles of the law of armed conflict; non-combatant immunity and its converse, the so-called combatant's privilege; military necessity, distinction, and proportionality constraints on hostilities; prohibited weapons; belligerent occupation; the historical role of reciprocity and consequent difficulties posed by asymmetric warfare; artificial intelligence and "autonomous" weapons; and other controversies that characterize warfare in the early twenty-first century. Grading will be based chiefly on a short final paper. LIMITED WRITING OPTION: With the instructor's permission, a limited number of students may satisfy the upper-class writing requirement through their final term papers. ** 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.


SPRG 2026: LAW JD 979 A1, Jan 12th to Apr 22nd 2026
Days Start End Credits Instructors Bldg Room
Thu 4:20 pm 6:20 pm 3 Robert D. Sloane