Timeroom: Summer 2024

Displaying 1 - 10 of 30 Results for: Campus = Law; ;page = 5
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Clinical (LAW)

LCL 908 (01) - Advanced Intellectual Property and Transaction Clinic

Adv Intel Prop&TransactnClinic

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   2  
CRN: 70911
Continue working on real-life client cases after taking the IP & Transaction Clinic. Students taking the Advanced IP & Transaction Clinic will take on more challenging projects, will assist with supervision of basic IP & Transaction Clinic students, and will gain the proficiency to more quickly and independently bring strategic plans for client objectives to conclusion. Proficient trademark and copyright prosecution, business transactions, sound legal judgment, and good ethics will be expected.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Prerequisite(s): (LCL 935 or LCL 935) and (LCL 936 or LCL 936)
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), Law Experiential Learning, EUNH
Instructors: Ed Timberlake
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Clinical (LAW)

LCL 935 (01) - Intellectual Property and Transaction Class

Intel Prop & Transaction Class

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Synchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 70912
The Clinic class is the lecture component of the Clinic experience, and registration for the combination of this Class and the Clinic is required for first-term IP Clinic students. The class will cover lawyering skills, ethics, IP-related skills. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Scheduled meeting time, Online (no campus visits), Law Experiential Learning, EUNH
Instructors: Ed Timberlake
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 M 8:00pm - 10:00pm ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Clinical (LAW)

LCL 936 (01) - Intellectual Property and Transaction Clinic

Intel Prop &Transaction Clinic

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 2.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 70913
Students represent real clients in IP prosecution, litigation, and transactional matters in their 6 office hours/week schedule (8.5 in summer) under professor supervision. Clients include artists, businesses, and non-profits. Concurrent registration in the Intellectual Property & Transaction Class (LCL 935) is required. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), Law Experiential Learning, EUNH
Instructors: Ed Timberlake
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Criminal Law (LAW)

LCR 905 (1LH) - Criminal Law

Criminal Law

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Hybrid (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   100  
CRN: 70916
The course covers the concepts and topics typical of substantive criminal law courses. We investigate the elements that de?ne crimes and defenses. We look at certain constitutional doctrines as bearing on the limits of legislative authority to de?ne conduct as criminal. The course offers a good opportunity to practice the skills of statutory interpretation, and confronts students with the policy and ethical questions underlying choices and implementation about what conduct should be de?ned as criminal, and under what circumstances the law should recognize excuses or justi?cations for otherwise criminal conduct. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Albert Scherr
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Criminal Law (LAW)

LCR 925 (1ON) - Comparative Criminal Justice Systems

Comparative Crimnl Just Sytems

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 70918
Only a small portion of international criminal law disputes are resolved in some form of international court like the International Criminal Court or a special tribunal. The majority are instead resolved in a domestic court system, meaning that, effectively, the practice of international criminal law occurs in a number of different criminal justice systems. This course familiarizes students with the varieties of criminal justice systems around the world. Though each country or region has its own individual system tailored to its history and culture, regional and cultural similarities exist in the structure and approach of individual systems. The course will ground students in the major types of criminal justice systems around the world, from the Anglo-American system to a European system to an Islamic system. The course will look both at individual systems from countries that have a strong presence in the world of international criminal law and at the general principles that underlie the differences in major systems.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Shanell Sanchez
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Criminal Law (LAW)

LCR 928 (1ON) - Drugs and Weapons Trafficking

Drugs & Weapon Trafficking

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 70919
Weapons and drug trafficking are among the largest underground industries in the world. Generating hundreds of billions of dollars in annual revenue, and spawning a global industry of money laundering, trafficking has profound effects not only in the developing world but also in the well-established economies of Europe, Asia and North America. Trafficking leads also to a series of collateral social issues including increased crime rates, profound societal effects and costs, rampant public corruption and large-scale funding of terrorist activities. This course familiarizes students with the origins and present state of international trafficking in weapons and drugs and the money laundering practices used to conceal it from detection. It includes an examination of how trafficking is conducted on a global scale, what efforts have been undertaken to combat it, and what the international community is doing to address the many complex issues involved. International standards and cross-cultural obstacles are examined, as are political implications. The course will examine the approaches to these problems used in countries that have a strong interest or participation in trafficking. In addition, international best practices and standards will be critically assessed.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Daniel Pi
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: Criminal Law (LAW)

LCR 929 (1ON) - Capstone Research Project

Capstone Research Project

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Full Term (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   10  
CRN: 70920
This course serves as the capstone to the process begun with the International Criminal Law Survey course. Students will complete a significant research and writing project on a subject of their choice under the supervision of a faculty member. The project will include a set of deadlines for outlines and drafts as well as frequent interaction with the Professor. The emphasis will be on a product reflective of a significant analytical effort rather than a merely broad descriptive one.
Instructor Approval Required. Contact Instructor for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Albert Scherr
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 900 (1LH) - The Legal Profession

The Legal Profession

Online Course Delivery Method: Immersion Attendance Required
Credits: 1.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Hybrid (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Law Satisfactory/Unsatisfactry
Class Size:   95  
CRN: 70902
In this course, students acquire a basic understanding of the numerous career paths available to lawyers, explore basic concepts of legal professionalism, understand the fundamentals of the business of law, practice the ?soft skills? necessary for effective lawyering, and develop an individual career development strategy for exploring their unique professional interests throughout the next three years. During classes, students meet practitioners from a variety of practice areas. The attorneys address various business and professional issues they handle on a daily basis so that students can begin to discern not only the legal and business issues in different legal practices, but also the professional standards that attorneys will expect of them in the workplace. During a portion of each class, students apply the information they learned from the attorneys to a practical aspect of their own professional development. Students also research and establish a mentoring relationship with a practitioner, attend networking events, participate in community service projects, attend additional events, meetings, and conferences and practice other ?soft skills? as requirements of the course. This class meets for two hours every other week. Students are expected to complete several specific written assignments. Grading is S/U and is based on attendance, participation and satisfactory completion of all projects and written assignments. This is a required 1L course.
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged TBA
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 903 (1LH) - Administrative Process

Administrative Process

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Hybrid (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   80  
CRN: 70938
Administrative law is the law of how government agencies operate. Topics covered include the mechanisms through which agencies act, the constitutional constraints on their actions, and the ways in which the executive, legislative, and judicial branches can exercise oversight and control over those actions. By the end of this course, students should be prepared to identify and analyze the stages of administrative rulemaking and adjudications; apply constitutional doctrines that constrain agencies such as due process, nondelegation, and separation of powers; and apply statutory and constitutional doctrines governing administrative actions and judicial review of those actions. This course cannot be taken for an S/U grade.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: Holly Stout
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE
Law   Franklin Pierce School of Law :: General Practice (LAW)

LGP 910 (1LH) - Secured Transactions

Secured Transactions

Online Course Delivery Method: Online Asynchronous
Credits: 3.0
Term: Summer 2024 - Law Hybrid (05/20/2024 - 08/02/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   50  
CRN: 70921
This course examines the rules governing transactions in which personal property and fixtures are used as collateral to secure an obligation. This body of law addresses not only the rights of the debtor and creditor inter se but also the rights of third parties with an interest in the collateral. The primary source of authority is Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, but students will also be introduced to other applicable laws, including primarily the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
Attributes: Online (no campus visits), EUNH
Instructors: STAFF
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
5/20/2024 8/2/2024 Hours Arranged ONLINE