Timeroom: Spring 2024

Displaying 51 - 60 of 166 Results for: Campus = Law
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 951 (01) - Professional Responsibility

Professional Responsibility

Credits: 3.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   50  
CRN: 51811
Professional Responsibility provides an in-depth study of the law of lawyering. The coverage includes the provisions of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, bar admission, malpractice, and the "business of law," such as multijurisdictional practice, advertising, and practices with professionals from other disciplines. The course will also expose students to the criticism of the ethics of the legal profession and discuss the use of the adversarial system as the dominant model for our justice system. The course will use the problem-method as its primary vehicle to structure the discussion. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Sophie Sparrow
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 MW 1:00pm - 2:30pm UNHL 204
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 951 (02) - Professional Responsibility

Professional Responsibility

Credits: 3.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   50  
CRN: 54991
Professional Responsibility provides an in-depth study of the law of lawyering. The coverage includes the provisions of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, bar admission, malpractice, and the "business of law," such as multijurisdictional practice, advertising, and practices with professionals from other disciplines. The course will also expose students to the criticism of the ethics of the legal profession and discuss the use of the adversarial system as the dominant model for our justice system. The course will use the problem-method as its primary vehicle to structure the discussion. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Raef Granger
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 R 5:00pm - 8:00pm UNHL 229
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 952 (01) - Property

Property

Credits: 4.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   145  
CRN: 51810
This course will introduce and illustrate the fundamental legal concepts and terms involved in the control of property, including real estate, personal property, intangible property, and intellectual property. With primary emphasis on real property, topics covered include the rights and powers of ownership, how property rights are acquired and conveyed, how those rights can be shared between people simultaneously and over time, and how property rights can be divided, regulated, and restricted by the government. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Attributes: Bar Elective Course
Instructors: Roger Allan Ford
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 TF 1:00pm - 3:00pm UNHL 204
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 958 (1LH) - Sports Law

Sports Law

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law Hybrid (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   70  
CRN: 54382
This course will explore the unique set of legal and social structures that intersect with sports in the United States. It will challenge students to debate underlying principles and rethink the legal, policy and ethical boundaries that surround the sports industry. To that end, students will learn key concepts related to the law of private associations, antitrust law, labor law, torts, intellectual property, broadcasting and communications laws, and technology and privacy laws.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Michael McCann
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 964 (01) - Drug Law

Drug Law

Credits: 3.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 57003
Students will learn how the US regulates the development, marketing, sale, and consumption of legal and illegal drugs. They will explore the history of the FDA and DEA, the regulation of prescription medicines, the history and implications of the war on drugs, and the challenges of implementing harm-reduction strategies. The course will be useful to students interested in a variety of fields including health law, criminal law, mental health law, pharmaceutical regulation, and cannabis law.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Michael Dube
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 MW 9:00am - 10:30am UNHL 205
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 971 (01) - BioInnovation Research Collaboration and the Law

BioInnovation Resch Collaborat

Credits: 2.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 52558
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.
Only listed colleges in section: Graduate School, Franklin Pierce School of Law
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Bruce Leicher
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 R 5:30pm - 7:30pm UNHL 175
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 973 (01) - Extended Bar Review

Extended Bar Review

Credits: 2.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   60  
CRN: 54997
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.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Attributes: Bar Elective Course
Instructors: Kevin Frost
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 R 5:15pm - 7:15pm UNHL 205
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: Spring 2024 - Law Hybrid (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   50  
CRN: 54211
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.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW JD DWS, LAW: JD, LAW: JD ADV, LAW: JD MBA, LAW: JD MPP, LAW: JD SW
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), Bar Elective Course, EUNH
Instructors: Marta Young
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 989 (01) - Civil Rights Litigation

Civil Rights Litigation

Credits: 2.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   15  
CRN: 56975
This course focuses on litigation under 42 U.S.C. 1983 - the principal vehicle for civil rights claims prosecuted in the federal courts. The primary emphasis of the course is on the practical and procedural aspects of civil rights litigation, including matters such as standing, immunities, various issues relating to pleading and proof, the availability and choice of remedies, and the recovery of attorneys' fees. The course is designed to give students the practical knowledge required to effectively litigate civil rights claims in the federal courts while providing insight into the larger jurisprudential debate that has shaped the law in this area.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Jordan Budd
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 R 1:00pm - 3:00pm UNHL 102
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 990 (01) - Law Special Topics

LawSpcTop/Federal Indian Law

Credits: 3.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Law (01/16/2024 - 05/10/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   30  
CRN: 56970
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.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated for a maximum of 15 credits.
Majors not allowed in section: LAW: JD HYBRID
Excluding the following students: Graduate Law - Online
Instructors: Arthur Gajarsa
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/16/2024 5/10/2024 MW 1:00pm - 2:30pm UNHL 205
Additional Course Details: 

Federal Indian Law

This course will review and analyze the relationship between the Unites States Government and the Native Indian Tribes within its border. The U.S. Constitution under Article I Sec. 8 Paragraph 3 grants the U.S. Congress the authority “To regulate Commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with Indian Tribes.” Pursuant to this clause, the Federal Government has the primary responsibility for dealing with Indian Tribes. The law and U.S. public policy relating to the Native Nations and its members has evolved continuously since the founding of the United States.

This course will require closer study of United States history from its founding to the present day. This history is dynamic and will require a strong analytical critical challenge for the failures of the Federal Government in pursuing its policy trying to protect and recognize cultural differences and political autonomy. It should be noted that we shall view the historical relationship with a critical edge in seeking to process policy and enforceable law.

We shall therefore be studying Federal Indian Law rather than Tribal Law, although we may contrast the adoption of several provisions of the Iroquois Confederacy tradition by the Founding Fathers.

We shall therefore be required to reconsider the development of history and the policy adopted by treaties and federal statutes beginning with the first ratified treaty between the United States and an Indian Tribe: The Treaty of Fort Pitt with the Delaware Nation Sept. 17, 1778, 7 Stat. 13.

The historical dimension of the relationship between the Indian Tribe and the Federal Government cannot be ignored. It is the underpinning of this course and viewed through the spectrum of Federal Treaties, Statutes, and Supreme Court opinions.