Timeroom: Fall 2023

Displaying 691 - 700 of 1272 Results for: Level = All Graduate
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 953 (01) - Remedies

Remedies

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   35  
CRN: 15878
In this course students review the major kinds of relief clients can obtain in claims involving torts, contracts, property and other civil causes of action - all of which are tested on the bar exam. The course focuses on three majors kinds of remedies - damages, injunctions, and restitution - through readings, solving problems, and short writing assignments. Classes will be focused on solving problems through active team-based learning strategies. During the course students will show in writing and orally how lawyers solve problems in the area of remedies- what laws they use, how they apply them to new facts, and how they use those facts to make arguments to judges or juries. To successfully complete this course students will: 1. Analyze and synthesize primary and secondary authorities; 2. Solve legal problems; 3. Investigate facts, including developing and questioning inferences; 4. Make legal arguments; 5. Understand how to access and information related to remedies; 6. Think critically about law, policy and alternatives to legal remedies; 7. Draft legal documents that communicate clearly, are persuasive, and comply with applicable rules; 8. Learn the basic law and policy of remedies: damages, injunctions, and restitution; 9. Evaluate the advantages of pursuing different remedies to achieve clients' objectives; and 10. Participate professionally in class. This course is recommended for taking the bar exam.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Instructors: Neals-Erik Delker
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 MW 5:30pm - 7:00pm UNHL 204
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 956 (01) - Pro Sports Law: Unique Relationship, Leagues, Team and Players

Professional Sports Law

Credits: 2.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   28  
CRN: 13757
This course examines various legal issues affecting professional sports industries and the relationship between leagues, teams, players and affected third-parties. Topics include related issues in antitrust, labor, work stoppages, contracts, intellectual property, advertising/brand management, torts, franchise relocation, immigration, disability and pension systems, anti-discrimination, regulation of private associations, regulation of athlete agents and their ethical duties, sports broadcasting and esports. Pursuit of careers in sports law, especially becoming attorneys for teams or leagues or becoming sports agents, is also covered.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Instructors: Michael McCann
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 T 3:00pm - 5:00pm UNHL 200
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 960 (01) - Torts

Torts

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   75  
CRN: 11892
This course exposes students to the fundamentals of the major tort doctrines, focusing primarily on negligence and introducing intentional torts, strict liability, and products liability. Through reading primary authorities - cases and statutes - and secondary authorities such as the Restatement of Torts, jury instructions, and related materials, students learn legal principles. Working on skills-based exercises, students practice analyzing and applying torts principles to factual scenarios. During the course students show in writing and orally how lawyers solve problems in the area of torts - what laws they use, how they apply them to new facts, and how they use those facts to make arguments to judges or juries. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Daniel Pi
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 TF 1:00pm - 2:30pm UNHL 229
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 960 (02) - Torts

Torts

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   75  
CRN: 11893
This course exposes students to the fundamentals of the major tort doctrines, focusing primarily on negligence and introducing intentional torts, strict liability, and products liability. Through reading primary authorities - cases and statutes - and secondary authorities such as the Restatement of Torts, jury instructions, and related materials, students learn legal principles. Working on skills-based exercises, students practice analyzing and applying torts principles to factual scenarios. During the course students show in writing and orally how lawyers solve problems in the area of torts - what laws they use, how they apply them to new facts, and how they use those facts to make arguments to judges or juries. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Instructors: Sophie Sparrow
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 MW 11:00am - 12:30pm UNHL 204
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 971 (1LH) - BioInnovation Research Collaboration and the Law

BioInnovation Resch Collaborat

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law Hybrid (08/16/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 14898
This course will explore the legal, regulatory and business issues that arise from the research, development, manufacturing and sale of innovative bio-medical products. Students will work through a case study to simulate the collaborative development of a product, learning in a dynamic and multi-disciplinary classroom. The curriculum will track key areas of the law that impact the development of innovative products, specifically cutting edge issues that arise when bringing together industry, academia and government collaboration around bio generation. Students will emerge from this pilot program ready for the challenge of identifying the issues facing companies working in bioinnovation space and specifically those companies seeking services from ARMI, Inc.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Only listed colleges in section: Franklin Pierce School of Law
Only listed majors in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Bruce Leicher
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/16/2023 12/15/2023 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 973 (1LH) - Extended Bar Review

Extended Bar Review

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law Hybrid (08/16/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 14323
This course is designed to jumpstart your bar exam preparation by developing your substantive knowledge and sharpening your critical bar exam success skills. Specifically, you will receive in-depth review of highly tested topics in Contracts, Evidence, Torts and Real Property. You will then put that knowledge to use working through practice MBE and essay questions. You will learn how to develop a strong but flexible framework to resolve bar exam problems, sharpen your reading comprehension, issue identification, rule mastery, critical thinking and legal analysis skills.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Only listed majors in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), Bar Elective Course, EUNH
Instructors: Marta Young
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/16/2023 12/15/2023 Hours Arranged TBA
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 981 (01) - Consumer Law

Consumer Law

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   50  
CRN: 15919
Consumer Law examines contemporary consumer law, situating its statutes in the common law of tort and contract. The class is organized around a consumer transaction, including how businesses attract consumers, the terms of the products or services purchased, and the remedies or enforcement tools available if the deal goes awry. In addition to longstanding important topics such as unfair or deceptive acts and practices, warranties, and consumer credit law, the class examines how the consumer law landscape is changing. Issues include technological advances that raise privacy concerns; the increase in automobile debt and student loans; and the work of the newest federal agency, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. This class will not be exclusively about "consumer protection" but instead will consider consumer law from multiple viewpoints, including those of businesses that are regulated by consumer law and those of policymakers who are charged with protecting the public interest in a fair marketplace.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Instructors: Chantalle Forgues
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 MW 9:00am - 10:30am UNHL 229
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 990 (01) - Law Special Topics

LawSpcTop/HumanRights & SocJus

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 14918
Special topics courses explore emerging developments in the law or take advantage of special expertise provided by visitors and guest faculty. Courses offered under this title are approved by the Associate Dean and may be designated to meet skills or advanced writing requirements. Special topics classes may only satisfy elective credit and are available only to law students after their first year of study and graduate students by permission.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated for a maximum of 15 credits.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Instructors: Gilles Bissonnette
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 TR 1:00pm - 2:30pm UNHL 103
Additional Course Details: 

​Human Rights and Social Justice

This class examines the role of lawyers in movements for social justice and some of the key human rights issues that exist in the United States, including how lawyers and judges have both contributed to and tried to address these issues through existing legal doctrines.

When we think of human rights issues, we tend to think of abuses that exist beyond our borders.  But human rights issues exist in the United States, and our proximity can often desensitize us to these issues.  As Human Rights Watch wrote in 2021:

Important human rights failings of the United States were laid bare in 2020.

The grossly disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on Black, brown, and Native people, connected to longstanding disparities in health, education, and economic status, revealed the enduring effects of past overtly racist laws and policies and continuing impediments to equality. The police killing of George Floyd in May, and a series of other police killings of Black people, sparked massive and largely peaceful protests, which in many instances were met with brutality by local and federal law enforcement agents.

This Human Rights Watch report goes on to document human rights failings in the United States in the context of racial justice, poverty and inequality, injustices in the criminal legal system and juvenile justice system, drug policy, the rights of non-citizens, health and human rights, voting rights, the education, the environment, reproductive rights, elderly rights, sexual orientation and gender identity, and freedom of expression and assembly, among other areas. 

This class will examine many of these human rights issues, including discussing whether these issues are actually problems that need addressing.  In doing so, this class will discuss how legal doctrines created by lawyers and judges have both contributed to and tried to address some of these issues.  We will also use case studies from New Hampshire to demonstrate how these issues have had an impact more locally.

In the context of these human rights issues, we will not only explore the legal origins of these issues, but we will also explore core questions about what it means to be a lawyer interested in public interest advocacy and pushing for social justice. The goals for this course will be—in addition to developing a command of the legal doctrines implicating various human rights issues—to become familiar with civil rights advocacy and the approaches public interest lawyers take to their work.  To do so, we will analyze in the first part of the course historical and contemporary movement lawyering and explore different advocacy tools and their efficacy in solving social problems. 

Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 990 (02) - Law Special Topics

LawSpcTop/Low Income Tax Prac

Credits: 3.0
Term: Fall 2023 - Law (08/21/2023 - 12/15/2023)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   12  
CRN: 16871
Special topics courses explore emerging developments in the law or take advantage of special expertise provided by visitors and guest faculty. Courses offered under this title are approved by the Associate Dean and may be designated to meet skills or advanced writing requirements. Special topics classes may only satisfy elective credit and are available only to law students after their first year of study and graduate students by permission.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated for a maximum of 15 credits.
Instructors: Barbara Heggie
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/21/2023 12/15/2023 MW 9:00am - 10:30am UNHL 175
Additional Course Details: 

FEDERAL LOW-INCOME TAXPAYER PRACTICUM

This course will cover basic administrative federal tax practice, with an experiential component. Working under the guidance of 603 Legal Aid’s Low-Income Taxpayer Project, students will learn how to represent a client before the Internal Revenue Service in basic cases involving return preparation, return processing, refund traces, identity verification, identity theft, audits, collections, innocent spouse relief, and appeals. The central focus of the experiential component will be case handling, and students will primarily be assigned cases involving incarcerated people seeking help with missing stimulus payments. In addition to the casework necessary for handling their cases, the students will learn how to interview clients, gather and investigate relevant facts, work with the Internal Revenue Service, and track all case activity and documents in client case management systems. Students will also learn how to conduct outreach and education for low-income populations, network with local professionals to involve them in Pro Bono work, and advocate for systemic change within the Internal Revenue Service.