COURSE | TITLE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | DEPARTMENT | CREDIT HOURS | ||||
LW495 | JURISPRUDENCE AND LEGAL THEORY | 2025 | 2 | Law & Philosophy | 3.0 (BS=0.0, ET=0.0, MA=0.0) | ||||
SCOPE | |||||||||
This is the capstone course for both the American Legal Studies and International and Comparative Legal Studies Majors. The course is an advanced seminar in legal philosophy as applied to contemporary domestic and international legal issues. It analyzes these issues using the perspectives of jurisprudence (the ideas and reasoning of jurists) and legal theory (using insight from disciplines such as science, economics, and political theory to address legal problems). It explores theoretical and practical approaches to identifying, developing, and preserving the rule of law. The course integrates legal coursework throughout the Academy curriculum and the Cadet?s respective legal studies major. | |||||||||
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SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: | |||||||||
Three written partial reviews and a final paper which analyzes a contemporary legal problem using the analytical tools of jurisprudence and legal theory. |
TYPE | COURSE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | TRACK | RED BOOK FLG |
PRE REQUISITE | |||||
LW310 | 2004 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403 | 1991 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403L | 2020 | 1 | 2 | Y |
AYT | #SECT/SIZE | CPBLTY | ENRLD | WAIT | SEATS | CLOSED | DETAILS | ||
2025 - 2 | 3 | 20 | 60 | 55 | 0 | 5 | N | Hours | |
2026 - 2 | 3 | 20 | 60 | 55 | 0 | 5 | Y | Hours | |
2027 - 2 | 4 | 20 | 80 | 57 | 0 | 23 | N | Hours | |
2028 - 2 | 4 | 20 | 80 | 0 | 0 | 80 | N | Hours | |
COURSE | TITLE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | DEPARTMENT | CREDIT HOURS | ||||
LW495 | JURISPRUDENCE AND LEGAL THEORY | 2019 | 2 | Law | 3.0 (BS=0.0, ET=0.0, MA=0.0) | ||||
SCOPE | |||||||||
This is the capstone course for both the American Legal Studies and International and Comparative Legal Studies Majors. The course is an advanced seminar in legal philosophy as applied to contemporary domestic and international legal issues. It analyzes these issues using the perspectives of jurisprudence (the ideas and reasoning of jurists) and legal theory (using insight from disciplines such as science, economics, and political theory to address legal problems). It explores theoretical and practical approaches to identifying, developing, and preserving the rule of law. The course integrates legal coursework throughout the Academy curriculum and the Cadet?s respective legal studies major. | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: | |||||||||
Three written partial reviews and a final paper which analyzes a contemporary legal problem using the analytical tools of jurisprudence and legal theory. |
TYPE | COURSE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | TRACK | RED BOOK FLG |
PRE REQUISITE | |||||
LW310 | 2004 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403 | 1991 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403L | 2020 | 1 | 2 | Y |
COURSE | TITLE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | DEPARTMENT | CREDIT HOURS | ||||
LW495 | JURISPRUDENCE AND LEGAL THEORY | 2012 | 1 | Law | 3.0 (BS=0.0, ET=0.0, MA=0.0) | ||||
SCOPE | |||||||||
This is the capstone course for both the American Legal Studies and International and Comparative Legal Studies Majors. The course is an advanced seminar in legal philosophy as applied to contemporary domestic and international legal issues. It analyzes these issues using the perspectives of jurisprudence (the ideas and reasoning of jurists) and legal theory (using insight from disciplines such as science, economics, and political theory to address legal problems). It explores theoretical and practical approaches to identifying, developing, and preserving the rule of law. The course integrates legal coursework throughout the Academy curriculum and the Cadet?s respective legal studies major. | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: | |||||||||
Three written partial reviews and a final paper which analyzes a contemporary legal problem using the analytical tools of jurisprudence and legal theory. |
TYPE | COURSE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | TRACK | RED BOOK FLG |
PRE REQUISITE | |||||
LW310 | 2004 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403 | 1991 | 1 | 1 | Y |
COURSE | TITLE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | DEPARTMENT | CREDIT HOURS | ||||
LW495 | JURISPRUDENCE AND LEGAL THEORY | 2005 | 1 | Law | 3.0 (BS=0.0, ET=0.0, MA=0.0) | ||||
SCOPE | |||||||||
This course studies legal thought and theory, focusing on the concept of the rule of law. It analyzes the rule of law using the perspectives of jurisprudence (the ideas and reasoning of jurists) and legal theory (using insight from disciplines such as science, economics, and political theory to address legal problems). It explores theoretical and practical approaches to identifying, developing, and preserving the rule of law, such as natural law, legal realism, law and economics, critical legal studies, and feminist jurisprudence. It applies these approaches to problems related to the rule of law, such as constitutionalism, constitutional and statutory interpretation, crime and punishment, economic development, and human rights. | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: | |||||||||
Three written partial reviews and a final paper which analyzes a contemporary legal problem using the analytical tools of jurisprudence and legal theory. |
TYPE | COURSE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | TRACK | RED BOOK FLG |
PRE REQUISITE | |||||
LW310 | 2004 | 1 | 1 | Y | |
LW403 | 1991 | 1 | 1 | Y |
COURSE | TITLE | EFF YEAR | EFF TERM | DEPARTMENT | CREDIT HOURS | ||||
LW495 | LEGAL PHILOS & JURISPRUDNCE | 1992 | 1 | Law | 3.0 (BS=0.0, ET=0.0, MA=0.0) | ||||
SCOPE | |||||||||
This capstone course presents a philosophical approach to the study of the nature of law. What is law? Why does law exist? Where does law come from? Is law universal or culturally rooted? What is the relationship of morality to law? Is law based on philosophy or ideology? Is law natural or man-made? Do alternatives to law exist? What does law teach us about our society, our values, and ourselves? Cadets will then explore notions of justice, morality, criminal responsibility and mental impairment, and examine the inherent tensions between individual liberty and legal order. Cadets will also study the role of U.S. judges in reviewing contemporary legal issues as well as radical contemporary challenges to mainstream legal theory and practice. | |||||||||
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SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: | |||||||||
A single paper which philosophically examines a broad concern of the legal discipline in light of all the courses taken in the field of study and draws together the possibilities and limitations of the discipline. |