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COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
Conflict of Laws: Theory and Practice
Prof. Joseph W. Glannon, Prof.
Gabriel H. Teninbaum
3 credits day; 3 credits evening.
Not offered 2013-2014.
The term "conflict of laws" refers to the interesting problems courts face when a dispute has connections to two or more states or countries, so that a court hearing the dispute must determine which body of substantive law to apply to the case. The course will introduce students to basic problems in conflict of laws, including traditional choice of law theory, modern approaches to choice of law, party autonomy in choosing the applicable law, constitutional constraints on choice of law, state/federal choice of law problems and full faith and credit to judgments. The course will teach the material partly through practice-oriented writing assignments that give students the opportunity to think about conflicts problems as practitioners do and to refine their legal writing skills. The basic course requirements will not satisfy the writing requirement, but a student may complete an additional assignment to do so. There will be no exam. Instead, students will be graded on several written assignments.
Faculty comments: Professor Glannon: The class style will be a mix of discussion and Socratic questioning. The course will differ from a traditional Conflicts course in that students will also write two practice-oriented writing assignments that provide an opportunity to think about conflicts problems as practitioners do and to refine legal writing skills.
Enrollment
is limited: 20
Elective
Course
Meets
Civil Litigation Concentration Requirements
Meets
International Law Concentration Requirements
Meets
Advanced Legal Writing Standard
Final
Exam Required
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<<Course Updated: April 08, 2013>>
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