Law Courses Open to Graduate and Undergraduate Students
Graduate Students: Graduate or professional students are welcome to pursue a Law Minor, while undergraduates can pursue a Business Law Minor. Most Law School Courses open to Graduate Students are taught at the 6000 level. More information is available on the alphabetical course listing. These courses generally are open on a space-available basis. Some courses may require individual approval by the faculty member teaching the course. All communication should be conducted through the Law School Registrar via the Non-Law Student Petition for Law Courses form. First-year law courses (6001-6009) and experiential learning courses (7000 level) are open only to current law students.
Undergraduate Students: Juniors and seniors can take a number of courses at the Law School to study the legal systems and doctrines that intersect with their fields of interest. Although many of these courses have no formal prerequisites, students are encouraged to begin with Law 3000, Introduction to American Law and Legal Reasoning. Below are some examples of course combinations that undergraduate students have taken at the Law School, organized by subject area:
Essentials of Business
Financial Regulation
Mergers and Acquisitions
Intellectual Property and Technology
Patents
Copyrights
Trademark
Data Privacy Law
Intellectual Property and Technology Seminar
Energy Law
Health Law and Policy
Health Law
International Law and Human Rights
Immigration Law
Other
Introduction to American Law and Legal Reasoning
Patent Law Proseminar
Law of Business Organizations
Insurance Law