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Legal Studies

Coordinator: Alexandria Zylstra, J.D.

Minor is Legal Studies

Students who successfully complete the following courses will receive a Minor

in Legal Studies.

 

Required Courses:

LPR 111:  Women, Law and Justice (3 hrs.)
LPR 220:  Legal Analysis and Problem Solving(3 hrs.)
PHL 201:  Logic and Critical Thinking (3 hrs.)

LPR 302:  Professional Communication (3 hrs.)

One of the following courses:

LPR/PSC 360:  Supreme Court and Constitutional Law (3 hrs.)   or

BUS 352:  Business Law (3 hrs.)


Law, Philosophy, and Rhetoric Courses

 

LPR 110: Women, Law and Justice
(3 hrs.)
(Open to all students; cross-listed as WST 110)
An introduction to the system and practice of law by focusing on areas of law impacting women's lives: family law, employment law and criminal law. Legal reasoning and research, text analysis and lawyers' lives are explored. Class panels and field trips.


LPR 220: Legal Analysis and Problem Solving
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: LPR 110 or permission of the instructor)
This course explores legal research and writing. The course emphasizes effective writing methods and teaches students to analyze successfully various legal problems. Students will learn the skills and technology to be effective in today's legal environment, especially strategies for research and modes of legal writing.

LPR 250: Conflict Resolution: Personal and Community Negotiation
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: sophomore standing)
This course explores a variety of conflict resolution methods including: negotiation, mediation, arbitration, and judicial processes. By examining personal, community, and world conflicts, students will learn how to analyze, select and apply an appropriate conflict resolution.

LPR 280: Topics in LPR
(1-3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: dependent on topic)
Check semester course schedule for current information. Taught at irregular intervals in response to current issues, student requests, themes, availability of key personnel or other special needs. Investigates content related to one of the interdisciplinary areas comprising the major.

LPR 301: Internship
(1-3 hrs.)
(May be taken twice for credit but counts only once in electives category)
(Prerequisite: permission of program chair)
Students will intern in a local law office, public interest group, or other agency under professional supervision.

LPR 302: Professional Communication
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisites: BUS 225 or permission of instructor.) This course teaches the theory and skills necessary for understanding and practicing effective professional communication. It emphasizes effective oral communication in professional settings and provides students opportunities to practice skills that allow them to communicate successfully in their professional careers.

LPR 306: Argument
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: one liberal arts course)
The study of Socratic argument covers dialogues and dialectic; Aristotelian argument covers the Rhetoric, topics, syllogisms and enthymemes. The course also addresses gender issues as they relate to classical and modern argument. Rogerian argument features the dynamics of a nonadversarial approach to conflict. Toulminian argument presents a corrective to dialectic and argument through the open syllogism and chained discourse.

LPR 352: Business Law
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: junior standing or permission of instructor. Cross-listed as BUS 352.)
A study of the basic concepts of law as they relate to legal rights and remedies, with an emphasis on contracts and other facets of law relevant to business practice.

LPR 360: The Supreme Court and Constitutional Law
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisites: LPR 110 or PSC 101, sophomore standing; or permission of instructor; cross-listed as PSC 360.)
Course explores the basic principles of American constitutional law through an examination of the United States Supreme Court. Focuses on the history of the Court, civil liberties and individual rights and the development of social policy as understood through landmark Supreme Court decisions.

LPR 380: Topics in LPR
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: dependent on topic)
Check semester course schedule for current information. Taught at irregular intervals in response to current issues, student requests, themes, availability of key personnel or other special interdisciplinary areas comprising the major.

LPR 492: Senior Essay and Defense
(3 hrs.)
(Prerequisite: third-year standing; must be taken in the fall semester)
The student will write an essay that integrates and demonstrates competence in the fields of study that comprise the major. In addition, an oral defense of the essay is required, which will occur before an invited audience. A student may not write or defend the senior essay before the third year.

Independent Study

Independent studies (special studies, tutorials, readings, projects) may be proposed by students who wish to investigate a subject not otherwise available. Information about independent study may be obtained in department offices or in the Office of the Registrar.

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Updated on April 24, 2012

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