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Law and Society
The
Curricular Committee on Law and Society administers a cross-disciplinary
Law and Society major, fosters the general study of issues regarding
law and society throughout the college, and encourages public
presentations by visiting scholars, jurists, and lawyers. The
recommended core law and society courses and research seminars,
and the law-related courses, explore philosophical, political,
economic, historical, sociological, ethical, scientific, and religious
issues that are central to understanding the role of law and legal
institutions in society.
Core law and society courses are selected with the following objectives
in mind: 1) center on law and legal institutions directly; 2)
explore the historical, philosophical, and ethical underpinnings
of the development of law, thought, and institutions; and/or 3)
provide the analytic skills necessary to understand the logic
and bases of legal thinking as a language in legal institutions,
the broader society, and the profession of law. Core research
seminars and private reading/research courses provide to students
forums to undertake research papers which meet the above objectives.
Law-related courses have sections within them that meet at least
one of the three objectives that are listed above or provide students
an opportunity to write a term paper in which the scholarly issues
of the course may be applied to legal institutions, thought, and/or
the logic of legal inquiry.
Major. The major consists of at least thirty
hours of courses; no more than eight hours may be taken at the
introductory level; no more than 15 hours may be taken away from
campus. A minimum of four core courses (at least 12 hours) and
at least three additional law-related or core courses (at least
nine hours) are required in the major. In addition, at least one
core research seminar, and a private reading/research course on
a law-related topic, or a second core research seminar in place
of the private reading/research course, is required of all majors.
Finally, no more than 15 of the first 30 hours of the major may
be taken in one department. Core courses or seminars must be completed
in at least three departments. Students must have two advisors
from different departments and complete a major registration form,
including a rationale for the major, which is submitted to the
Chair of the Law and Society Committee for approval by the Law
and Society Committee.
Minor. Students may pursue a minor in Law and
Society by completing at least fifteen hours of work. At least
three core courses (in at least two departments) and two additional
law-related and/or core courses must be completed as part of the
minor. Students wishing to discuss the Law and Society major,
to secure a major registration form, a list of current curricular
committee members, or to gain approval for a minor, please contact
Ronald Kahn, Chair, Law and Society Curricular Committee, Department
of Politics, Rice 232.
Core
Courses:
Chemistry
145 Chemistry and Crime
Economics
217 Anti-Trust Economics
224 Law and Economics
253 Intermediate Microeconomics
History
259 Revolutionary America and the Early Republic
Jewish Studies
258 Introduction to the Talmud: Argument and Interpretation
Philosophy
105 Philosophy and Values
200 Deductive Logic
201 The Analysis of Reasoning
226 Social, Political and Legal Philosophy
Politics
103 Political Change in America
202 American Constitutional Law
233 American Political Theory I: To the Civil War
236 American Political Theory II
Religion
245 Moral Issues in Religious Perspective
249 Issues in Medical Ethics
271 Islamic Authorities: Law and Society
Sociology
123 Deviance, Discord, and Dismay
271 Sociology of Law and Legal Institutions
273 Criminology, Delinquency, and Legal Policy
331 Torts, Trials, and Troubles
Core
Research Seminars:
Gender and Women's Studies
406 Gender and the State in the Middle East and North Africa
History
442 Democracy and Human Rights in China
Jewish Studies
353 Seminar: Moses Maimonides: Philosophy and Law
Politics
300 Seminar in Contemporary Constitutional Theory
301 Seminar in First Amendment
321 Seminar in International Politics: International Human
Rights & Law
334 Seminar: Justice and Democracy in Contemporary America
Religion
340 Seminar: Ethical Issues in Death and Dying
Sociology
472 Sociology of Law Seminar
Law-Related
Courses:
Classics
103 History of Greece
104 History of Rome
206 Greek and Roman Drama in Translation
Economics
206 Financial Management
219 Labor-Management Relations
231 Environmental Economics
313 Games and Strategy in Economics
317 Industrial Organization
323 Public Sector Economics
331 Topics in Environmental Economics
English
371 Scene of the Crime: Crime Stories in American Film
372 Contemporary Literary Theory in American Culture
History
263 The American Civil War and Reconstruction
266 Women and Social Movements in the United States
322 Women and Power in Nineteenth Century America
390 Slavery, Antislavery and Emancipation in American History
Philosophy
204 Ethics
225 Environmental Ethics
Politics
119 First Amendment and the Internet (FYSP)
203 Congress: Politics and Policy-making
231 European Political Theory: Classical to Early Modern
232 European Political Theory: Machiavelli to Marx
Psychology
214 Abnormal Psychology
218 Social Psychology
410 Seminar in Sociocultural Psychology
Religion
247 Feminist Ethical Issues
Theater
362 Art on Trial
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