Introduction to American Law
Course Information
- Course Number
- L6560
- Curriculum Level
- Upperclass
- Areas of Study
- LL.M. and J.S.D. Courses
- Type
- Lecture
- Additional Attributes
- LLM NY Bar Exam Qualifier
Section 001 Information
Instructor

Section Description
August 17 - September 2
This course introduces U.S. law and the U.S. legal system to students who have received
their previous education and training in another legal system. Through close reading and analysis
of judicial opinions, statutes, administrative regulations, scholarly writing and other
materials in constitutional law, private law (tort, contract, property), administrative law,
criminal law, and civil and criminal procedure and process, the course offers a selective field
survey of the law school curriculum; daily classroom discussion will also expose students to
the "Socratic method," the foundational mode of instruction in the first-year
of U.S. law study. A central theme of the course is the difference between the common law and civil
law. So far as is practical, we will situate and analyze the U.S. materials within a comparative
perspective. By the end of the course, students can expect to have become familiar with the key
terms, interpretive methods, modes of argument and institutional arrangements that are distinctive to
American law and legal culture, and that require particular attention by students trained abroad.
- School Year & Semester
- Fall 2022
- Location
- JGH 106
- Schedule
-
Class meets on
- Monday
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- Thursday
- Friday
- Points
- 2
- Method of Evaluation
- Exam
- J.D Writing Credit?
- No
Learning Outcomes
- Primary
-
- Basic working literacy in U.S. legal concepts, analysis and institutions
- Secondary
-
- Introduction to the "Socratic method" and techniques for taking U.S. law school examinations (multiple choice and essay).
Course Limitations
- Instructor Pre-requisites
- None
- Instructor Co-Requisites
- None
- Requires Permission
- No
- Recommended Courses
- None
- Other Limitations
- None