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2005-2006 Course Catalog


Contents

Chapter 1
Academic Information

1.1 Length of Program

Full-time Option (DAY) A full-time option is available to entering and returning students. Students may enroll for 12-16 credits and be considered full time during an academic semester, and 6-8 credits during a summer term. The law school curriculum may be completed in six academic semesters. Students can accelerate this program by attending summer school, or extend the time necessary for completing the curriculum by reducing the number of credit hours taken per semester. Students cannot complete the Hamline full-time program in less than two years nor more than eighty-four (84) months. Under the fulltime program students must register for a minimum of 12 credits per academic semester, and 6 credits per summer term.

Part-time Option (DAY) A part-time option is available to entering and returning students. Students may enroll for 8-11 credits and be considered part-time during an academic semester, and 3-5 credits during a summer term. Enrollment is limited to fifteen percent (15be filled on a first-come, first-served basis. Students may switch from part time to full time or from full time to part time each semester, space permitting in the part-time program. However, once a student registers as a part-time student, they are entitled to a part-time slot until they choose to register as a full-time student. Attending school on a part-time basis will affect a students graduation date. Part-time students must complete their studies within eighty-four months of their matriculation date. During their law school careers, students attending on a part-time basis will be classified as first-, second-, or third-year law students based on the number of credits they have accumulated at the end of each semester.

Full-time Option (WEEKEND) A full-time option is available to entering and returning students. After completing their first weekend semester, students may enroll for 12-16 credits and be considered full time during an academic semester, and 6-8 credits during a summer term. Students must complete their studies within eighty-four months of their matriculation date. Students must register for a minimum of 12 credits per academic semester, and 6 credits per summer term.

Part-time Option (WEEKEND) A part-time option is available to entering and returning students. Students may enroll for 8-11 credits and be considered part-time during an academic semester, and 3-5 credits during a summer term. Enrollment is limited to fifteen percent (15be filled on a first-come, first-served basis. Students may switch from part time to full time or from full time to part time each semester, space permitting in the part-time program. However, once a student registers as a part-time student, they are entitled to a part-time slot until they choose to register as a full-time student. Attending school on a part-time basis will affect a students graduation date. Part-time students must complete their studies within eighty-four months of their matriculation date. During their law school careers, students attending on a part-time basis will be classified as first-, second-, or third-year law students based on the number of credits they have accumulated at the end of each semester.

1.2 Legal Perspectives

Each entering student will be required to take one of the following legal perspectives courses:

DRI Summer Abroad: Paris/Budapest
DRI Summer Abroad: Rome, Italy
Israel Summer Abroad Program
Norway Summer Abroad Program
Comparative Law
Consortium Class in Equal Justice
Intl Human Rights Law
International Law
Jurisprudence
Law and Economics
Law and Humanities
Legal History
Restorative Justice
Sem/1st Amendment
Sem/2nd Amendment
Sem/American Jury Trial
Sem/American Slavery & the Law
Sem/Con Interpretative Theory
Sem/Constitutional Law
Sem/Crime & Punishment
Sem/Criminal Law: Police Practices
Sem/Education Law
Sem/European Union Law
Sem/Ethics Homicide Intl Human Rights
Sem/From Rules to Ethics
Sem/Gender & Childhood
Sem/Homicide
Sem/International Human Rights
Sem/International Law
Sem/Intl Civil Literature
Sem/Latinos and Development of the Law in the United States
Sem/Law, Religion & Politics
Sem/Lawyer as Problem Solver
Sem/Lawyers & Leadership
Sem/Lethal Violence
Sem/NAFTA
Sem/National Security Law
Sem/Native American Law
Sem/Persuasion
Sem/Practice of Law
Sem/Race and the Law
Sem/Takings
Sem/World Trade Organizations
ST/Animal Law
ST/Comparative Negotiation & DRP
ST/Dispute Resolution
ST/DR Restorative Justice
ST/Ethics
ST/From Rules to Ethics
ST/Gender and the Law
ST/Genetics
ST/Intl Criminal Justice
ST/Intro to the Civil Code (Puerto Rico)
ST/Jurisprudence
ST/Law & Humanities
ST/Military Justice and the Law of War
ST/Practice of Law
ST/Sexual Orientation

1.3 Policy on Employment

According to Academic Rule 1-111, a full-time student is defined as a student who devotes substantially all of his or her working hours to the study of law (A.B.A. Standard, Section 304). Any full-time student who is employed in excess of 20 hours per week may be deemed in violation of this standard. This rule applies during the entire three years of a full-time students law school education; it does not apply to part-time status. The rule also does not apply to summer classes unless the student is using summer as a term of attendance in order to graduate early.

1.4 Policy on Visiting Away or Transfer

The policy of Hamline University School of Law regarding application to visit away at another ABA accredited law school (other than under the Consortium agreement, p. 33), or application for transfer to another law school is as follows:

Visiting Away Requests

  1. There will be a $50 processing fee per request, which must accompany each application form. There will also be a per credit charge of $10 for every credit over ten which is transferred onto your Hamline transcript.
  2. Other than a Consortium class, visiting at other Minnesota law schools will not be allowed except in the case of a course which will not be offered during a students time at Hamline University School of Law.
  3. Visiting away will not be permitted during the last semester of a students law school career.
  4. Only grades of 2.0 on a 4.0 point scale, or its equivalent, or above, will receive credit transferring into Hamline.

Transfer Requests
There will be a $50 processing fee per request, which must accompany each Application for Letter of Good Standing form.

1.5 Credit Load and Limitations

Part-time students may not register for less than 8 credits and full-time students may not register for more than 16 credits without approval from the associate dean for academic affairs. Overload/ Underload Credit Forms are available in the Registrars Office.

1.6 Course Limitations

A student may not, within the same academic year, receive credit for:

  1. Either Law Review, Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy, or Journal of Law and Religion.
  2. More than one Appellate Advocacy Moot Court Team experience.

Without permission of the Associate Dean, a student may not receive credit for:

  1. More than one independent study.
  2. More than one practicum.
  3. More than a total of 5 credits in law school competitions.

A student may take only one seminar unless there is an opening in a seminar after the early drop/add period.

1.7 Graduation Requirements

The responsibility rests with the student ensuring that his or her program includes all requirements for graduation.

  1. First-Year Courses

    First-Year Courses (Day) (Should be taken within the first two semesters of law school)





    Fall Semester Spring Semester




    Civil Procedure I 3 Civil Procedure II 3
    Contracts I 3 Contracts III 3
    Legal Rsch/Wrtg I 2 Legal Rsch/Wrtg II 2
    Torts I 3 Constitutional Law I 3
    Criminal Law 3 Property I 3




    Total 14 Total 14




    First-Year Courses (Weekend) (Should be taken within the first three semesters of law school)





    Civil Procedure I 3 Civil Procedure II 3
    Contracts I 3 Contracts II 3
    Legal Rsch/Wrtg I 2 (2d sem)
    Legal Rsch/Wrtg II 2 (3rd sem)





    (The following four courses are part of the first-year curriculum of the weekend option, but may be offered in any one of your first three semesters)





    Torts I 3 Constitutional Law I 3
    Criminal Law 3 Property I 3




  2. Completion of Professional Responsibility.
  3. Completion of a course designated as a seminar.? Seminar courses are open to second- and third-year day students and third semester or beyond weekend students. A student may take more than one seminar only if space allows after those who have not yet had a seminar have registered. A seminar course shall require a substantial paper that is rewritten following a critique by the professor of an earlier draft. Enrollment in each seminar course will be limited to 16 students.
  4. Each student will be required to take a legal perspectives course. See earlier paragraph on Legal Perspectives for classes satisfying this requirement.
  5. Completion of at least 88 semester credits of which 45 must be completed in residence at Hamline.
  6. Cumulative grade point average of 2.000 or above.
  7. Completion of course work for J.D. degree within 84 months for full-time students and part-time students.
  8. Hamline University School of Law currently graduates its students in May, August, and January.

1.8 Minnesota Bar Exam

Hamline courses which help prepare students to take the Minnesota Bar Examination are usually offered twice each year.

Courses which help prepare students to take the Minnesota Bar Examination



Minnesota Bar Subjects Hamline Courses


Administrative Law Administrative Law


Civil Procedure Civil Procedure


Constitutional Law Constitutional Law I & II


Contracts Contracts


Criminal Law & Procedure Criminal Law & Criminal Procedure I


Ethics & Professional Responsibility Professional Responsibility


Evidence Evidence


Family Law Family Law


Federal Individual Tax I: Taxation of Individuals


Partnership, Proprietorship & Corporations Corporations
Unincorporated Business Entities


Real Property Property I, Property II or Modern
Real Estate Transactions


Torts Torts I and II


Wills, Estates & Trusts Wills & Trusts


Uniform Commercial Code Article 1,2 Commercial Transactions


Students must also pass the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination in order to be admitted to the bar in Minnesota. Application forms are available in the Registrars Office. Each Board of Law Examiners has specific rules for applicants to their bar. Please check immediately upon entering law school regarding your particular requirements.

Chapter 2
Curriculum

2.1 Curriculum, Day Option

(Course Scheduling for Upper Level Students)

Courses Offered Fall and Spring Every Year



Course Name Credits


American Legal Systems 3


Clinics 3


Competitions 1 or 2


Constitutional Law II 3


Corporations 3


Dispute Resolution Practices 2


Evidence 3


Family Law 3


Journal of Law and Religion 1 or 2


Journal of Public Law and Policy 1 or 2


Independent Study 1, 2 or 3


Law Review 1 or 2


Lawyering Skills 3


Legal Research and Writing 4


Legal Research and Writing Teaching Assistant 1 or 2


Litigation Practice 4


M.A.M. Courses 4


M.A.N.M. Courses 4


M.A.P.A. Courses 4


Practicums (three each term) 3


Professional Responsibility (required) 2


Selected Topics (up to five per term) 2 or 3


Seminars (at least six each term) 3


Tax I: Taxation of Individuals 3


Offered Fall or Spring Every Year



Course Name Credits


Accounting for Lawyers 1


Advanced Legal Research 3


Advanced Litigation Practice 3


Arbitration 2


Bankruptcy (spring) 3


Business Planning 3


Commercial Transactions 3


Comparative Law 3


Conflict of Laws 3


Environmental Law & Ecology 3


Estate Planning & Taxation 3


Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition(fall) 3


International Human Rights Law 3


International Law 3


Labor Law 3


Legal Advocacy 2


Mediation Skills 2


Modern Real Estate Transactions 3


Property II 3


Secured Transactions (fall) 3


Tax II: Taxation of Business Entities 3


Torts II 3


Unincorporated Business Entities 2


Offered Fall or Spring Alternate Years



Course Name textbfCredits


Admiralty 3


Antitrust 3


Arts & Entertainment Law 2


Banking Law 3


Bankruptcy Reorganizations (spring) 2


Business Issues in Agriculture 2


Children & the Law 2


Civil Rights 3


Collective Bargaining & Labor


Arbitration 2


Commercial Paper/The Payment System 3


Commercial Real Estate Transactions 2


Computer Law 2


Consumer Transactions 2


Copyright Law and Related Rights 2


Criminal Procedure II 2


Employment Discrimination (spring) 3


Employment Law (fall) 3


Federal Courts 3


Government Regulation of Agriculture 2


Immigration 3


Insurance 3


International Business Transactions 3


International Civil Litigation 3


International Intellectual Property (spring) 2


Jurisprudence 3


Land Use Planning 3


Law & Economics 3


Law of Air & Water Quality 2


Law of Juvenile Delinquency 2


Legal History 2


Legislation 2


Mass Media Law 3


Patent Law 2


Pros & Def of White Collar Crime 2


Regulation of the Health Care Industry 2


Remedies 3


Securities Regulation 3


Social Welfare Law 2


State & Local Government 3


State & Local Tax & Public Finance 2


Toxic & Hazardous Substances: Superfund 2


Trademark Law 2


Workers’ Compensation 3


Offered at Least Three Terms Every Two Years



Course Name Credits


Administrative Law 3


Criminal Procedure I 3


Wills & Trusts 3


Offered Irregularly



Course Name Credits


Corporate Finance 2


Labor Relations in the Public Sector 2


Law and Medicine 2


Medical Malpractice: Theory & Practice 3


Native American Law 2


Seminar in Administrative Law 3


Seminar in Business Law 3


Seminar in Civil Procedure 3


Seminar in Commercial Law 3


Seminar in Constitutional Law 3


Seminar in Criminal Law 3


Seminar in Criminal Procedure 3


Seminar in Environmental Law 3


Seminar in Ethics 3


Seminar in Evidence 3


Seminar in Family Law 3


Seminar in Interdisciplinary Studies 3


Seminar in Jurisprudence 3


Seminar in Law and Medicine 3


Seminar in Property 3


Seminar in State & Local Government 3


Seminar in Tax Law 3


Seminar in Torts 3


Seminar in Transnational Law 3


2.2 Curriculum Weekend Option

(Course Scheduling for Upper Level Students)

Offered at least every other year


Administrative Law

Commercial Transactions

Constitutional Law II

Corporations

Criminal Procedure I

Evidence

Family Law

Professional Responsibility

Property II or Modern Real Estate Transactions

Tax I

Tax II

Torts II

Unincorporated Business Entities

Wills & Trusts

Other basic courses will be offered sufficiently enough to allow weekend students to graduate.

2.3 Dispute Resolution Institute Course Offerings

Offered Every Summer and/or January Term



Course Name Credits


Certificate Program in
Arbitration Law and Practice 6


Introduction to Arbitration Law and Practice:
Domestic and International Aspects 2


Consumer Arbitration 1


Employment Arbitration 1


Securities Arbitration 1


Transborder Arbitration 1


Arbitration Skills Clinic pass/fail


Paris/Budapest Summer Abroad Program 6


Fostering International Commerce in Paris:
Arbitration Law and Practice 3


Building in Budapest: Mediation and
Other Methods to Foster Democratic Dialogue 3


Rome Summer Abroad Program 6


European Business Law 1


Negotiating International Business Transactions 3


Mediating International Business Disputes 2


Arbitration 2


Dispute Resolution Practices 2


Family Mediation 2


Mediation 2


Negotiation 2


Theories of Conflict 2


Offered Irregularly


Course Name Credits


Advanced Mediation Series 3


Evaluative Mediation 1


Facilitative Mediation 1


Transformative Mediation 1


Collaborative Law 2


Deposition Practice 1


Dispute Resolution in the Criminal Context 1


Employment Law ADR 2


Environmental and Public Interest Dispute Resolution 2


Interviewing and Counseling 2


Mediation Advocacy 1


Negotiating the Minefields of Managed Health Care 1


Public Policy and ADR 2


Restorative Justice, Cultural Conflict, and Social Healing 2


Settlement Advocacy 1


Technology and ADR 1 or 2


Unbundled Legal Services 1


2.4 Advanced
Curriculum

Agricultural Law
 
Business Issues in Agriculture
Government Regulation of Agriculture
Alternative Dispute Resolution
 
ADR Clinic
Advanced Mediation Series
Evaluative Mediation
Facilitative Mediation
Transformative Mediation
Arbitration
Arbitration Moot Court (Vienna, Austria)
Certificate Program in Arbitration Law and Practice
Introduction to Arbitration Law and Practice: Domestic and International Aspects
Consumer Arbitration
Employment Arbitration
Securities Arbitration
Transborder Arbitration
Arbitration Skills Clinic
Client Counseling Competition
Collaborative Law
Collective Bargaining and
Labor Arbitration
Cross-Cultural Negotiation
Dispute Resolution in the Criminal Context
Dispute Resolution Practices
Employment Law ADR
Environmental and Public Interest Dispute Resolution
Family Mediation
Interviewing and Counseling
Mediation
Mediation Advocacy
Mediation Advocacy Moot Court
Mediation Clinic
Negotiating the Minefields of Managed Health Care
Negotiation
Negotiation Moot Court
Online Arbitration, Negotiation, and Mediation Moot Court
Paris/Budapest Summer Abroad Program
Fostering International Commerce in Paris: Arbitration Law and Practice
Building Bridges in Budapest: Mediation and Other Methods to Foster Democratic Dialogue
Public Policy and ADR
Restorative Justice, Cultural Conflict, and Social Healing
Rome Summer Abroad Program
European Business Law
Negotiating International Business Transactions
Mediating International Business Disputes
Seminar in ADR
Technology and ADR
Theories of Conflict
Unbundled Legal Services
Business and Commercial Law
 
Accounting for Lawyers
Antitrust
Banking Law
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy Reorganizations
Business Planning
Collective Bargaining and Labor Arbitration
Commercial Paper
Commercial Real Estate Transactions
Commercial Transactions
Computer Law
Consumer Transactions
Corporate Finance
Corporations
Employment Discrimination
Employment Law
Insurance
Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition
International Business Transactions
Labor Law
Labor Relations in the Public Sector
Secured Transactions
Securities Regulation
Seminar in Business Law
Seminar in Commercial Law
Unincorporated Business Entities
Criminal Law
 
Advanced Litigation Practice
Criminal Procedure I and II
Evidence
Litigation Practice
Prosecution & Defense of White Collar Crime
Seminar in Criminal Law
Seminar in Criminal Procedure
Seminar in Evidence
Environmental Law
 
Environmental Law and Ecology
Law of Air and Water Quality
Seminar in Environmental Law
Toxic and Hazardous Substances: Superfund
Intellectual Property
 
Arts and Entertainment Law
Computer and Internet Law
Copyright Law and Related Rights
Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition
International Intellectual Property
Patent Law
Trademark Law
Unfair Competition and Other Predatory Practices
International & Comparative Law
 
Admiralty
Comparative Law
Conflict of Laws
Immigration Law
International Business Transactions
International Civil Litigation
International Human Rights Law
International Law
Law, Religion and Ethics (Israel)
Norwegian Law and Legal System (Norway)
Seminar in Transnational Law
DRI Summer Program Abroad
(France/Hungary)
DRI Summer Program Abroad (Italy)
Jurisprudence: Historical,
 
Philosophical and
 
Interdisciplinary Topics
 
Jurisprudence
Law and Economics
Law, Religion, and Ethics (Israel)
Legal History
Professional Responsibility
Seminar in Ethics
Seminar in Interdisciplinary Studies
Seminar in Jurisprudence
Law and the Person
 
Children and the Law
Civil Rights
Employment Law
Family Law
International Human Rights Law
Labor Law
Law of Juvenile Delinquency
Native American Law
Seminar in Family Law
Seminar in Torts
Torts II
Lawyering Skills
 
Advanced Legal Research
Clinics
Client Counseling Competition
Dispute Resolution Practices
Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy
Law Review
Legal Advocacy
Litigation Practice
Mock Trial
Moot Court
Practicums
Personal Injury/Health Care
 
Advanced Litigation Practice
Insurance
Law and Medicine
Litigation Practice
Medical Malpractice
Regulation of the Health Care Industry
Seminar in Law & Medicine
Seminar in Torts
Workers Compensation
Practice and Procedure
 
Conflict of Laws
Evidence
Federal Courts
Remedies
Seminar in Civil Procedure
Seminar in Evidence
Property
 
Commercial Real Estate Transactions
Estate Planning and Tax
Land Use Planning
Modern Real Estate Transactions
Property II
Seminar in Property
Wills and Trusts
Public Law
 
Administrative Law
Civil Rights
Collective Bargaining and Labor Arbitration
Constitutional Law II
Consumer Transactions
Employment Discrimination
Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy
Labor Law
Labor Relations in the Public Sector
Land Use Planning
Legislation
Mass Media Law
Native American Law
Seminar in Administrative Law
Seminar in Constitutional Law
Seminar in State and Local Government
Social Welfare Law
State and Local Government
Taxation
 
Estate Planning and Tax
Seminar in Tax Law
State and Local Tax/Public Finance
Tax I: Taxation of Individuals
Tax II: Taxation of Business Entities

Chapter 3
Course Descriptions

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
3 credits
Examines the powers and procedures of administrative agencies in investigation, rulemaking, adjudication, and informal actions; as well as the interrelation of administrative agencies with the legislative, judicial and executive branches of government in the development of public policy.
Offered at least three semesters every two years

ADVANCED LEGAL RESEARCH
3 credits
Provides in-depth training in efficient, cost-effective research methods covering a wide range of on-line and manual formats. It includes a review of basic research materials and techniques, and a focus on primary and secondary sources, with written exercises which include a comprehensive research guide on a particular topic.
Offered fall or spring every year

ADVANCED LITIGATION PRACTICE
3 credits
Provides advanced in-depth training in advocacy skills for each stage of litigation through lecture, discussion, demonstration, simulation and critique. Considers both civil and criminal trials. Students complete a simulated bench trial and jury trial. Prerequisites: Criminal Procedure I and Litigation Practice
Offered fall or spring every year

AMERICAN LEGAL SYSTEM
3 credits
This class is for LL.M. and Norwegian exchange students only. Specifically designed to acquaint law students visiting from foreign countries with the American legal system.
Offered fall and spring every year

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAW
2 credits
Encompasses a variety of topics relevant to an understanding of the practice of art & entertainment law. Specific areas of the law that will be covered include contracts, copyrights, trademarks, artistsa moral rights, labor law, the law of non-profit corporations, immigration law and its effect on foreign athletes and artists, and international law as it relates to the transportation of art. The study of contract issues will be broken into particular areas, such as fine arts, performance arts, the entertainment industry (music and film), publishing, and sports. The issues of artistic censorship as it related to obscenity laws and the first amendment will be discussed.
Prerequisite: Intellectual Property or Copyright Law
Offered fall or spring alternate years

BANKRUPTCY
3 credits

Studies state collection remedies, such as executions, garnishment and attachment, and bankruptcy liquidation under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Prerequisite: Secured Transactions
Offered fall or spring every year, usually spring

BANKRUPTCY REORGANIZATIONS
2 credits

Studies reorganizations under Chapter 11 (business reorganization), 12 (family farmer reorganization) and 13 (wage earner reorganization). Prerequisite or concurrent registration: Bankruptcy
Offered fall or spring alternate years, usually spring

CIVIL PROCEDURE
3 credits
6 credits Focuses on the civil judicial process and dispute resolution. It includes a study of the constitutional and legislative grants of authority to the state and federal judicial systems, including questions of personal jurisdiction, subject matter jurisdiction, and venue. Studies each stage of the civil lawsuit including pleadings, motions, discovery, trial, post-trial motions, appeals, and finality of judgments. In addition, examines alternatives to the litigation process including mediation and arbitration and the role of negotiation in resolving clients’ problems. Two-semester, first-year required course

CLINIC STUDENT DIRECTOR
credits
1, 2, or 3 Student directors will work in one of the Hamline Clinics and handle their own client caseload, as well as provide supervision to and collaboration with new clinic enrollees. Student directors will not attend regular weekly clinic classes, but are instead expected to devote a minimum of 45 hours per credit to client representation and supervision/collaboration with other clinic students as assigned by the clinic supervisor. Only students who have successfully completed one of the clinics are eligible to enroll as a student director; enrollment is by invitation of the instructor upon advance application. Preference will ordinarily go to students who have not yet been a clinic director. With permission of the supervisor this course can be repeated for credit. Students may enroll for 1, 2, or 3 with faculty approval.
Prerequisite: Professional Responsibility and one of Hamline’s clinics.
Recommended: Lawyering Skills, Litigation Practice and/or Evidence, Administrative Law, Dispute Resolution Practices, Children and the Law, Juvenile Law or Mediation Skills (depending on clinic focus).
Offered fall and spring every year

CLINIC/ADR
3 credits

This clinic offering takes advantage of a collaboration between Hamline and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to offer students the opportunity to represent victims of alleged employment discrimination in mediation proceedings. The clinic is designed to focus on the role of the lawyer in alternative dispute resolution venues, including, but not limited to, mediation. In addition to their mediation advocacy on behalf of clinic clients, students also will observe ADR processes conducted by court-appointed neutrals. Students are required to complete 130 hours, including 60 hours of class work and 70 hours of case work. Prerequisite or concurrent: Professional Responsibility.
Recommended: Dispute Resolution Practices (or one or more of the Dispute Resolution Institute Summer courses), Employment Law, Employment Discrimination,, Lawyering Skills, Litigation Practice, and/or Evidence.

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