Law (LAW)

The terms indicated are expected but are not guaranteed. For the courses offered during any given term, consult the Schedule of Classes.

200xg Law and Society (4) Sources and structure of law; history of Bill of Rights emphasizing effect on criminal justice system; limits of law in solving problems in American society. Not available for major credit.

201xg Law and Politics: Electing a President (4) Examination of the rules and realities of American politics, and the role politics plays in American life and culture. Not available for major credit to law students.

502 Procedure I (4) Consideration of the participants in litigation - private and public plaintiffs, defendants, and courts. Information exchange, process, outcomes, and costs of law suits.

503 Contracts (4, Fa) The interpretation and enforcement of promises and agreements.

504 Criminal Law (3) The crime problem and the legislative response to it through substantive criminal law; administration of criminal justice through police, prosecutorial, sentencing, and penological discretion.

505 Legal Profession (3, Sp) Functions of the lawyer in modern society; history and organization of the legal profession; the adversary system; equal access to justice; other problems of ethics and professional responsibility.

507 Property (4) The idea of property as understood through economic and philosophical concepts. Rights in land, water and other natural resources. Forms of shared ownership (e.g., landlord and tenant), and a survey of mechanisms for controlling land use.

508 Constitutional Law I (4) The function of the American Constitution; allocation of authority among branches of the national government; division of authority between the nation and the state; limitations of government control of the individual. The process of constitutional interpretation and the role of the United States Supreme Court.

509 Torts I (4) Individual's obligation not to harm others; bases for compensating persons who are harmed, either by holding responsible whoever is at fault or by invoking other principles of liability, including the efficiency of resource allocation and the spreading of losses.

510 Legal Research (0) Examination of the basic sources of law for federal and California jurisdictions; utilizing a vast array of sources from books to computer-assisted research and analyzes research methodology and techniques.

511ab Introduction to Lawyering Skills (1-4; 1-4) Two-semester course focuses on developing analytic and communication skills. Lawyers will analyze legal principles and incisively apply them to facts.

512 Law, Language, and Ethics (3) Law as the mind's attempt to define, direct, and administer human experience. Examination of theories of knowledge, language, meaning, mental process, social organization, personal responsibility and freedom which underlie legal thought and judicial decision-making.

568 The Rights of Groups (4) (Enroll in REL 568)

599 Special Topics (2-4, max 8)

600 Taxation (3 or 4) Federal tax statutes, technical issues and social problems involved in tax planning, tax litigation, and reform of the tax laws.

601 Taxation of Foreign Persons and Foreign Income (2 or 3) Application of United States tax laws to transactions which cross national borders; comparison of U.S. and foreign tax policies concerning concepts of residence for tax purposes, source rules, the "effectively connected" concept, the foreign tax credit, tax status of foreign subsidiaries and affiliates of United States persons and the effect of tax treaties.

602 Criminal Procedure (3) Criminal procedure in the courts, and the regulation of law enforcement by the courts through rules of evidence and interpretation of the Bill of Rights.

603 Business Organizations (3 or 4) Organization of economic activity - especially the modern corporation - as institutions of social power. The roles of managers, owners, and public regulatory agencies in shaping processes of decision-making.

605 Real Estate Transactions (4 or 5) The land transfer process: arrangements between buyers and sellers, brokers, escrows, recorders, title companies. Real estate financing through mortgages and other land security devices.

606 Land Use Controls (3 or 4) The regulation of land development through planning, zoning, subdivision controls and private devices. Mechanisms for coordinating regional development and financing new urban infrastructure.

607 Gifts, Wills, and Trusts (3 or 4) Gratuitous transfer of wealth, especially the transmission of wealth from one generation to the next as a settlement of family affairs. Comparative analysis of the legal mechanisms of gifts, wills, and trusts. Introduction to problems of fiduciary administration.

608 Evidence (3 or 4) The purpose and character of trial. Problems of adversary presentation and the nature of proof. The basis for admission and exclusion of evidence in judicial proceedings.

609 Torts II (2 or 3) Remedies of the law for injuries to an individual's personal integrity or to his reasonable economic expectations, including the torts of misrepresentation, defamation, and assault.

610 Advanced Civil Procedure (2-4, Sp) This course will look at juries and judges as decision-makers during trials. As background, we will examine the constitutional rights to a civil and criminal jury trial, and then focus on such features of the jury as voir dire, peremptory challenges, instructions, deliberations and differences in perceptions. The scope of jury authority, including jury nullification, as well as various models for the proper role of the jury in our society.

611 Banking Law (1-4) Law and regulation of banks and other financial institutions. Focus on federal and California banking law.

612 Agency Reading Course (2 or 3) The law concerning the agency relationship, so-called, in which one person, the agent, agrees to represent or act for another, the principal; the principal, by virtue of this agreement, is legally responsible in certain respects for what the agent does. No formal classroom attendance required; the student undertakes directed reading and takes a final examination.

613 Advanced Legal Research (2-4) This course will build upon basic research skills and expose the student to printed and online sources utilized by researchers in several specialized areas of law.

614 Accounting for Lawyers (2) The lawyer's skills needed to understand the financial affairs of a business client.

615 Election Law (1-4) Consideration of legal regulation of the right to vote and otherwise to participate in the electoral process.

616 Advanced Torts: Products Liability (2-4) Exploration of products liability law with special attention to its historical genesis and normative justification.

617 The History of American Legal Theory (2 or 3) Historical development of the contemporary American legal system; examination of the relation of law to main currents in political, social and economic thought.

618 Educational Policy and Law (2-4) Consideration of issues relating to education law and policy. Possible topics include academic freedom, affirmative action, privacy issues and freedom of expression.

619 Employment Law (2-4) Examination of the evolving role of work in our society and the nature and scope of legal regulation of the employment relationship.

621 Gender Discrimination (1-4) Analysis of the constitutional and statutory debates about the meaning of equality, and the recognition and accommodation of difference.

622 Foreign Tax II (2-4) Basic examination of federal tax treatment of foreign income of U.S. based corporate taxpayers: qualification of foreign taxes of U.S. credit treatment, establishment and operation of FSC and formation of foreign corporations.

623 The Family and the Law (3 or 4) Creating, regulating and dissolving family relationships. Explore moral and power relations among men, women, children and the state. Develop skills to help clients in families.

624 Law and Society in China (2-4) Development of the indigenous Chinese legal tradition, in the context of Confucian, Legalist, and Taoist philosophy.

625 Legal and Equitable Remedies (3 or 4) Comparison of the remedial goals of contracts, torts, and property and the impact of procedural devices in law and equity. Damages, injunctions, specific performance and restitution. Remedial theory and transactional application.

627 Mental Health Law and Criminal Justice Systems (2-4) Examination of the issues at the intersection of the mental health and criminal justice system. Topics discussed will include the insanity defense, disposition of insanity acquittees, competency to stand trial and competency to be executed.

628 Legal Issues of Music Production (2-4) Consideration of the business and legal issues arising in music production.

629 Real Estate Finance (2-4) A survey of the major types of financing used for real estate and the basic techniques used to make real estate investment and financing decisions.

630 Uses of Social Science Evidence (2-4) Consideration of both practical and normative issues that arise when lawyers and courts use social science evidence. A systematical review of the variety of methods that are used to generate social science evidence.

631 Feminist Legal Theory (1-4) The first half of the course will survey major arguments and key writings of feminist legal theory. The second half, seminar participation, will organize discussions that focus on significant legal decisions to investigate the fit and helpfulness of the various theoretical approaches.

632 What Lawyers Should Know About Business (2-4) This course introduces law students to the tools, concepts, and language of business. It is premised on the belief that to excel as a business lawyer, one must understand the business world from the perspective of the clients one counsels and assists. The course will cover, in compressed form, the basic subjects from the M.B.A. program which are most useful to lawyers.

634 Advanced Torts: Modern Accident Law (2-4) This course will focus primarily on product liability law, with some attention to mass torts, including environmental and toxic torts, and no-fault accident schemes. Moral and economic justifications for, and criticisms of legal rules in these areas will be emphasized along with the study of formal legal doctrine.

635 Alternative Dispute Resolution (1-4) An introduction to the variety of Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanisms now in use. Opportunities to observe, critique and participate in actual or simulated dispute resolution proceedings, and to meet with dispute resolution practitioners from the L.A. area will be included.

636 Labor Law (3 or 4) The interrelation of labor, business, and government in collective bargaining, federal regulation of union and management practices and pressures, especially through the Taft-Hartley Act.

637 International Trade Policy (1-4) Examination of the institutions and laws that regulate international economic relations. Students will be introduced to the major international agreements and national laws that regulate international trade goods, services and capital.

638 Negotiations (2-4) This course is designed to improve students' negotiating skills through the study of modern negotiation theory and by the application of that theory in a variety of in-class and out-of-class exercises and simulated negotiations.

639 Law and Literature Pilot (1-4) Exploration of the meaning of basic sociolegal institutions through the double lens of literature and law. Focus will be on institutions associated with the rise of market, including private property, contract, notions of profit and interest and the role of lawyers, litigation and legal forms.

640 Legal Conceptions of Maternity and Paternity (1-4) Exploration of the legal definition of a parent. Who is a parent, according to the law (rather than, what rights does a parent have), will be the fundamental question.

641 Commercial Law (2 or 4) Commercial transactions involving secured financing (other than land). Government regulation of such sales and borrowing through Article 9 of the Uniform Consumer Credit Code and other recent legislation.

642 Secured Transactions (2-4) This is a course on Chattel paper and secured transactions involving personal property under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code and some related bodies of law.

644 Corporate Tax (2 or 3, FaSp) Tax principles and practice applicable to business, especially problems of formation, liquidation, and reorganization.

647 Bankruptcy: Debtors and Creditors I (2 or 3) Bankruptcy of the poor, imprudent or unlucky, and of unsuccessful businesses. The mechanisms of our law for distributing the debtor's property and discharging his obligations.

649 Insurance (2 or 3) The pooling of risks and distributing of losses. Actuarial foundation and contract problems of insurance.

650 Entertainment Law (2-4, Sp) An examination of how the courts are handling selected, "cutting edge" topics in entertainment law. The topics will include the scope of and limitations on the right of publicity; fair use and parody defenses to copyright infringement; future technology clauses in rights contracts; and copyright and defamation issues arising in the online world. Previous entertainment law courses recommended, but not required.

655 Environmental Law (2-4) Focus on environmental law policy and practice. This course is a combination of regulatory and private law, with a special emphasis on disputes and regulations involving contamination in soil, water and air.

656 International Organization (1-4) A study of the work of both legal and international relations scholars. A brief introduction to the nature and recent history of international organizations; understanding of formal structures and rules; and consideration of legal and nonlegal norms that apply in the international community.

657 International Protection of Intellectual Property (1-4) The laws concerning how to enforce and exploit rights protecting media creations, marketing symbols, computer programs, new technologies, designs, know-how, and data across national borders.

658 Merger and Acquisitions (1-4) Problems of integrating the corporate, securities, tax, business, antitrust, accounting and contractual aspects of corporate mergers and acquisitions.

659 Ninth Circuit Seminar (1-4) Students will argue and judge oral arguments, after which the judges will hold conferences and write opinions, concurrences and dissents, which they can eventually compare to those of the Ninth Circuit in the same cases.

660 Trademark (1-4) A rigorous introduction to a law of trademarks. A trademark can be any word, symbol, design, sound, fragrance or product configuration that is used to distinguish the goods or services of one person from those of another, and to indicate the origin of the goods or services.

661 Laws and Institutions of the European Communities (3) Law of European communities, analysis of community law making; relationship between community law and law of member states. Comparative study of EEC law with law of non-members.

662ab Public International Law (3-4) Principles of international law involving relations among governments. The function of international tribunals and organizations.

663 Law of World Organizations (2) Development of the institutions of the community of nations, including the League of Nations and the United Nations. Constitutional and other legal problems arising from the Charter of the United Nations.

668 Moot Court Participation (2) Preparation of briefs and presentation of oral arguments in the Hale Moot Court honors competition. Graded CR/NC.

669 Moot Court Supervision (2) Evaluation and supervision of the preparation of briefs and oral arguments in the Hale Moot Court honors competition. Graded CR/NC.

670 Advanced Moot Court Oral Arguments (1-3, Sp) Preparation of oral arguments in approved moot court competitions, such as national and state prize rounds (other than Hale Moot Court Program).

671 Advanced Moot Court Briefs (1-3, Sp) Preparation of briefs in approved moot court competitions, such as national and state prize rounds (other than Hale Moot Court Program).

672 Jessup Moot Court (1-3, Sp) Students participate in a competition by writing a brief and arguing orally the issues in a problem that is the basis for the 1996 Jessup International Moot Court Competition. Participation is by faculty selection only.

676 Mental Health Law (1-4) Examination of issues in which psychiatry is relevant to the law. Subjects to be studied include standards of competency, the right to refuse treatment, civil commitment, and the insanity defense.

678ab Review of Law and Women's Studies Staff (1-4) Writing, source-checking, and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Review of Law and Women's Studies. For second year students serving as staff members on the Review.

679ab Review of Law and Women's Studies Writing (1-4) Writing, source-checking, and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Review of Law and Women's Studies. For second year students serving as staff members on the Review.

680ab Review of Law and Women's Studies Editing (1-4) Supervision of research and writing, and final editing of articles and comments for publication in the Review of Law and Women's Studies. For officers of the Review.

684 Appellate Advocacy (2-4) The primary focus will be on California Civil appeals and Writs. By the end of the course, the students will have prepared a writ petition and supporting papers and will have argued an appeal (brief supplied by instructor) in a moot-court type of setting.

691 Professional Responsibility Lecture and Reading Course (1-4) This combined lecture/reading course will begin with four classroom sessions of two hours each, focusing upon the rules governing the ethical practice of law. The remainder of the course will consist of assigned readings in the field of lawyer's ethics and professional responsibility.

692 Holmes and Cardozo Seminar (1-4) Consideration of the question "What is the role and function of a judge?" by examining the careers, opinions, and theoretical writing of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and Benjamin Cardozo.

694 Tax and Finance Seminar (1-4) Examination of the impact of taxation on dividend policy, the valuation of net operating losses, the choice between cash flow and accrual taxation, and the use of tax trading strategies for common stocks.

700 Health Care Regulations (1-4) Regulation of the medical profession; the physician-patient relationship; professional and institutional liability; health care institutions and delivery systems; quality control; access to health care services and problems of distribution and rationing; cost control, including government and private health care programs; patient rights; antitrust.

701 Juvenile Law (1-4) Juvenile law is a substantial and extremely important segment of the modern practice of law and is highly specialized. Focus is on the practitioner's point of view and the courtroom approach to juvenile issues.

703ab Children's Legal Issues (1-4; 1-4) Students will work on cases in the following areas: (1) Dependent and neglected children: All children who are wards of the court must have legal counsel. (2) Children with AIDS: Legal implications of such issues as health care and custody. (3) Guardianships or other temporary arrangements for children whose parents are terminally ill or are otherwise unable to care for them.

704ab Public Interest and Poverty Law (1-4) Two-semester course in which students represent indigent clients in a number of legal areas, under the supervision of both Law School faculty and attorneys from public interest agencies.

705 Community Property (1 or 3) The law of community property, including disposition of property on dissolution of the marriage and questions of conflict of laws. May be offered as a reading course.

706 Conflict of Laws: The Federal System I (2-4) The problem of interstate and inter-country private-dispute resolution: a: who has jurisdiction to make an externally enforceable decision (procedural due process and full faith and credit); b: whose law should be applied (choice of law and full faith and credit); c: the special role of the federal courts, including federal-state choice of law in diversity cases.

712 Medicine and Law (2 or 3) The adversary system as a setting for medical-legal issues; examination of the medical expert, malpractice suits, physician-patient privilege. Medical terminology, medical literature, and hospital and physician records. Problems of proving causation.

717 Estate Planning (3, FaSp) Legal and tax considerations important to the lawyer advising his client on the transmission of wealth from one generation to the next.

719 Corporate Finance (4) Legal and economic aspects of corporate finance including capital structure, policy, mergers, takeovers, and freeze-outs; analysis of policy relating to present law and possible reforms.

725 Bioethics and Law (3) Legal, ethical and economic problems of advanced biological technologies, for example, behavior, genetic, and reproductive control; control of the processes of dying; organ transplantation and the use of artificial organs; regulation of scientific research and human experimentation.

728 Admiralty (2) Admiralty law as a forerunner of much of commercial law and of modern specialized adjudicatory tribunals. Maritime contracts and naval matters.

733 Corporate Reorganization (2) Reorganization of failing corporations under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act. Claims, protective committees, plans, tax considerations.

734 Local Government Law (3 or 4) Study and evaluation of the municipal and regional legal institutions. Emphasis on the crises in financing and governing the urban society.

740 Women and the Law (2 or 3) The role of women in society and the way in which gender differences are reflected in law and legal theory.

743 Family Law Seminar (2 or 3) Investigation of selected problems of family law. Prerequisite: LAW 623.

744 Taxation Seminar (2 or 3) Investigation of selected problems of tax law. Prerequisite: LAW 600.

749 Securities Regulation (2-4, Sp) Regulation by state and federal agencies of issuance of, and trading in, stocks, bonds, and other securities. Particular reference to SEC regulations.

753 Antitrust Law I (3 or 4) Laws designed to preserve and promote business competition, with heavy emphasis on the federal antitrust laws.

757 Regulated Industries (2 or 4) Conduct of industries regulated by administrative agencies studied in terms of economic and political theory. The role of the market and restraints on the market as strategies for achieving social goals. The practical and theoretical implications of attempts at implementation.

760ab Computer/Tax Journal Staff (1-1 or 2) Writing, source-checking, and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Computer/Tax Law Institute's Journal. For third year students serving as staff members on the Journal. Graded IP/CR/NC.

761ab Computer/Tax Journal Writing (1-1 or 2) Writing, source-checking and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Computer/Tax Law Institute's Journal. For second year students serving as staff members on the Journal. Graded IP/CR/NC.

762ab Computer/Tax Journal Editing (3-3) Supervision and final editing of articles and comments for publication in the Computer/Tax Law Institute's Journal. Graded CR/NC.

763 Federal Courts: The Federal System II (3-5) Problems of adjudication in a federal system. Allocation of authority between federal and state courts and among Congress, the Executive and the Courts; choice of federal and state law; jurisdiction of federal courts and significant rules of practice.

764 International Business Transactions (3 or 4) Survey of legal aspects of international trade and investment transactions, including tax considerations.

767ab Law Review Staff I (1-1 or 2) Writing, source-checking, and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Southern California Law Review. For second year students serving as staff members on the Review. Graded IP/CR/NC.

768ab Law Review Writing (1-1 or 2) Writing, source-checking and preliminary editing of articles and comments for publication in the Southern California Law Review. For second year students serving as staff members on the Review. a semester graded IP.

769ab Law Review Editing (3-3) Supervision of research and writing, and final editing of articles and comments for publication in the Southern California Law Review. For officers of the Review. Graded CR/NC.

772 Intellectual Property (2 or 3) The protection of intellectual property and encouragement of creativity. Explores copyright, trademarks, patents, and selected state law theories.

774 Rights of Groups Seminar (3) Explores the place of groups (such as racial and ethnic groups, labor unions, family, neighborhood, class and religious groups) in the legal order governed and protected by the Constitution. Asks whether groups have rights comparable in stature to the rights of persons, and, if they do, how conflicts between the group rights and individual rights should be adjudicated.

775 Immigration Law (2 or 5) The development of immigration law to its present state.

777 Administrative Process (1-3) Legal principles subject to judicial control and the alternative ways in which agencies can be organized to serve their purposes.

780 The Role of the Lawyer: Professional Responsibility (2 or 3) Alternate career patterns; functions of the lawyer in modern society; history and organization of the legal profession; conflicting duties; the adversary system; equal access to justice; other problems of ethics and professional responsibility.

781 Clinical Internship/Externship I (1-10, FaSp) A clinical internship or judicial externship allows a student to gain hands-on legal experience in legal settings. Students will be assigned to a legal services program, government agency, state or federal judges, under faculty supervision. Graded CR/NC.

782 Clinical Internship/Externship II (1-10, FaSp) Advanced clinical training/externship. Graded CR/NC.

787 Judicial Law Clerk Externship (2-6 or 10) Experience in the role of law clerk to a court. Students will be assigned to state and federal judges to do legal research and other related duties. Graded CR/NC. Students are required to enroll concurrently in a dissertation course. Corequisite: LAW 788.

788 Clinical Internship/Judicial Externship Dissertation (1-4, FaSp) Students may register for 1-4 units of judicial externship dissertation to engage in supervised research and writing in connection with a clinical internship/judicial externship assignment. Any full-time faculty may supervise students upon agreement.

789 Dissertation (1 or 4) Students should register for 2 to 4 units of dissertation to engage in supervised research and writing which is expected to result in a paper of publishable quality. Any regular, full-time member of the faculty (including full-time visitors) may supervise students in this course upon agreement by the faculty member and the student. Other persons who teach in the J.D. program may supervise dissertation only upon approval of the Board of Review. A one unit registration for dissertation will be available only where the unit is to be added to the course where a paper is already required, in recognition that the student's paper will require substantially more work than that expected of other students in the course. Students may take a total of 4 units of dissertation during their educational experience at the Law School.

791 Jurisprudence of the Lawyering Process (2) Counseling and advocacy in the lawyering process are stressed, along with the contributions of the social and behavioral sciences and classical jurisprudence.

792 Legal Philosophy (2 or 3) Advanced study of selected schools of jurisprudential thought.

797 Jurisprudence Seminar (2 or 3) Investigation of selected jurisprudential problems.

798 Policy (2 or 3) Study of, the actual creation of, a general policy framework and design for (a) all of humankind and (b) lesser social groups, e.g., nation, city, family, club, corporation, etc. Analytical models and substantive prescriptions are designed. No academic discipline or experience is irrelevant. Emphasis upon social, legal, and political theory.

810 Patent Law (2) Patent laws, litigation, and the process of prosecuting the patent application. The concept of invention and ownership of rights under patents.

820 Pretrial Advocacy (3 or 4) Examines conceptual and practical aspects of interviewing, counseling, negotiation, settlement, drafting, and formal advocacy in the handling of legal cases.

821 Trial Advocacy (4) Examines decision-making by counsel in the litigation of cases. Emphasis is given to decisions involving tactics and strategies and their implications for the functioning of legal institutions and substantive doctrine. Extensive use of simulated trial practice exercises.

822 Legislation (2-3, Fa) The legislative process in Congress and state legislatures; legislative and judicial law making, statutory interpretation and drafting, and judicial activism and restraint.

837 Legal Aspects of Motion Picture Production (2) Seminar in business and legal issues arising in motion picture production. Class represents hypothetical production company; renders legal advice from acquisition of rights through production.

839 Copyright: Introduction to Entertainment Law (2 or 4) Basic entertainment law course: study of federal copyright law, analysis of property rights and interests created thereunder. Manner in which these rights can be exploited in the various entertainment media. Study of specific segments of the entertainment industry (motion picture, sports, etc.) is undertaken in separate courses.

840 Regulation of Broadcasting (2) Legal problems in radio and television broadcasting. Regulation by the Federal Communications Commission and state statutes. Tort liabilities; contract problems; advertising.

842 Partnership Taxation (2-4)

861 Criminal Justice Seminar (2 or 3) Investigation of selected problems of international law.

862 Transnational Litigation: The U.S. and Japan (2 or 3) Japanese legal philosophies and Japanese attitudes toward law and the legal system. Survey and discussion of related cultural foundations.

870 Lawyering Techniques Instructorship (2-4) Assist in teaching Introduction to Lawyering Techniques course. Responsibilities include drafting and grading writing and analysis assignments; teaching one small section of first year students, and designing first year Moot Court program.

871 Constitutional Law II (2 or 4) The First Amendment, freedom of expression (political speech, symbolic expression, obscenity, commercial speech, defamation), rights of access to the media of expression. The protection of religion and the prohibition of the establishment of religion.

890ab Directed Research (1-4) Directed Research may be taken only with the approval of the Administrative Board. This course is intended for substantial independent research and study that does not result in a paper of publishable quality. It includes, but is not limited to, preparation of research memoranda for faculty research projects, empirical research for such projects, and supervised independent study. Directed research is to be supervised by a regular, full-time faculty member (including full-time visiting faculty). Students may take a maximum of 4 units of Directed Research during their educational experience at the Law School.

891 Advocacy and Dispute Resolution (2 or 4) Study of the use of lawyer and non-lawyer advocates or ombusdmen; non-adversary processes, alternative tribunals, mediation and quality control processes, in order to resolve disputes and protect rights and entitlements. Examples may be drawn from patient care systems, prisons, consumer, neighborhood, or workplace disputes, or inter-business disputes.

892 Post-conviction Justice Seminar (1-5, FaSp) Weekly seminar examines the substantive rights of federal prisoners with respect to parole, sentencing, validity of conviction and conditions of confinement and the procedural mechanisms by which to enforce those rights. Under faculty supervision, students will provide legal assistance to federal inmates in administrative and judicial proceedings.

 

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