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Nov 23, 2024
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2020-2021 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Law and Society Concentration
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Undergraduate Concentration
The interdisciplinary law and society concentration explores questions about the impact and effects of law, legal institutions and legal actors on society from a variety of perspectives. It also explores the identification and analysis of legal arguments in a variety of contexts. Some of the courses also help the students develop their oral advocacy skills. The concentration can be taken in conjunction with any major at Clark. Generally, 200-level courses are not appropriate for first-year students.
For more information, please visit the Law and Society Department’s website.
Internships
Participating faculty sponsor a variety of undergraduate legal and law-related internship experiences. Students interested in these opportunities should inquire with the internship coordinator in the Office of Career Services. Directed Readings, Individual Research
Students who are motivated to undertake significant independent research should consult the individual faculty member with whom they wish to work regarding opportunities for independent study projects. Program Faculty
Patricia Ewick, Ph.D.
Mark Miller, J.D., Ph.D.
Courses
Courses offered within the last 2 Academic Years
- CHEM 050 - Forensic Science
- CMLT 109 - Human Rights and Literature
- CMLT 233 - Sexuality and Human Rights
- ECON 222 - Labor
- EN 282 - U.S. Environmental Pollution Policy
- HIST 040 - The Witchcraze: Witch Hunts in Early Modern Europe
- HIST 070 - Introduction to European Histor: Part I, to 1600
- HIST 201 - Era of the American Revolution
- HIST 202 - The Early American Republic
- HIST 212 - History of Sexuality: 1750 to the Present
- HIST 214 - The American Civil War
- HIST 215 - The Age of Lincoln
- HIST 217 - Reconstruction: America after the Civil War, 1865-1877
- HIST 222 - History of the American South
- HIST 223 - The Civil Rights Movement
- HIST 231 - Origins of Modern America, 1877-1914 (formerly America in the Gilded Age)
- HIST 277 - America’s Founding Fathers: Memory and Meaning
- HIST 295 - Dangerous Women
- ID 105 - Visualizing Human Rights: Culture, Law, and the Politics of Representation
- ID 291 - Refugees, Forced Migration, and Belonging
- LAS 038 - Trial Advocacy
- LAS 039 - Advanced Trial Advocacy I
- LAS 040 - Advanced Trial Advocacy II
- MGMT 262 - Business Ethics and Law
- PHIL 107 - Logic and Legal Analysis
- HIST 110 - Early Modern Europe
- PHIL 132 - Social and Political Ethics
- PHIL 270 - Philosophy of Law
- PSCI 015 - The European Union: Historical, Political, and Legal Perspectives
- PSCI 050 - Introduction to American Government
- PSCI 096 - Just and Unjust Wars
- PSCI 146 - The United Nations and International Politics
- PSCI 218 - Punishment and Crime
- PSCI 235 - Money and U.S. Politics
- PSCI 240 - Human Rights and International Politics
- PSCI 241 - Special Topics in American Politics
- PSCI 248 - Special Topics in International Relations
- PSCI 253 - U.S. Judicial Politics
- PSCI 257 - Comparative Courts and Law
- PSCI 266 - International Law
- PSCI 272 - U.S. Constitutional Law: Civil Liberties and Rights
- PSCI 273 - U.S. Constitutional Law: Governmental Powers
- PSCI 280 - Politics of Food and Drink
- PSCI 288 - Immigration, Identity, and Diversity Politics in the US
- PSCI 289 - Advanced Topics in International Relations - Capstone Seminar
- PSCI 291 - Lawyers and U.S. Politics - Capstone Seminar
- SOC 262 - Law and Society
- SOC 263 - Deviance
- SOC 272 - Punishment, Politics and Culture
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