Apr 20, 2024  
Course Catalog 2006-2007 
    
Course Catalog 2006-2007 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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 introductory and intermediate law and society courses, core research seminars, and 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 introductory courses and intermediate law and society courses and seminars 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.

Information About Declaration of a Major/Minor and Current Committee Members


Students wishing to discuss the Law and Society major, obtain a list of current curricular committee members, or to gain approval for major or minor, should contact Professor Ronald Kahn, Chair, Law and Society Curricular Committee, Department of Politics, Rice 232. Law and Society Majors must complete the Law and Society Major Registration Form (a copy of which stays in Committee files) as well as the College’s Major Registration Form which can be picked up at the Registrar’s Office in Carnegie.

Major


The major consists of at least 30 hours of courses, of which no more than 8 hours may be taken at the introductory level. Requirements include: a minimum of five core introductory and intermediate courses (at least 15 hours); at least three additional core and/or law-related courses (at least 9 hours); and at least one core research seminar. No more than 15 of the first 30 hours of courses in the major may be taken in one department.  Core courses and seminar(s) must be chosen from at least three departments, and no more than 15 hours may be taken away from campus. It is recommended that majors take a second core seminar or a private reading/research course which centers on law and society. 

Courses in which a student has earned a letter grade lower than a C-/CR/P cannot be used to fulfill the requirements of the major.

Minor


Students may pursue a minor in Law and Society by completing at least 15 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.

 

Core Introductory Courses


Chemistry (CHEM)


Philosophy (PHIL)


Sociology (SOCI)


  • SOCI 123 - Deviance, Discord and Dismay

Core Intermediate Courses


Economics


  • ECON 217 - Anti-Trust Economics

Religion


  • RELG 271 - Islamic Authorities: Law and Society

Sociology


  • SOCI 273 - Criminology, Delinquency, and Legal Policy
  • SOCI 331 - Torts, Trials, and Troubles
  • SOCI 365 - Law, Literature, and Society

Core Research Seminars


History (HIST)


Jewish Studies (JWST)


  • JWST 353 - Seminar: Moses Maimonides: Philosophy and Law

Psychology


Sociology (SOCI)


  • SOCI 472 - Sociology of Law Seminar

Law-Related Courses


Classics (CLAS)


  • CLAS 104 - History of Rome
  • CLAS 206 - Greek and Roman Drama in Translation

Economics (ECON)


  • ECON 206 - Financial Management

History (HIST)


  • HIST 266 - Women and Social Movements in the United States

Philosophy (PHIL)


Politics (POLT)


  • POLT 203 - Congress: Politics and Policy-making
  • POLT 231 - European Political Theory: Classical to Early Modern

Psychology (PSYC)


Religion (RELG)