Courses by Practice Area
International Law 3
| Terrorism and the Law Seminar 1 1533 | Law 543-01 |
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Terrorism is a special form of political violence that has been used throughout history by both states and sub-state organizations to sustain a wide variety of causes. This course examines the challenges faced in protecting against and responding to acts of terrorism, includng the conflicts of law, jurisdictional limits imposed by international and domestic legal regimes, and the need to balance increased security measures against protection of civil liberties. The course satisfies the Writing Requirement. |
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- Foundational
- International Business Transactions
- Public International Law
- Supporting
- Admiralty Law
- Comparative Civil Procedure
- Comparative Law 1
- European Union Law
- Human Rights Law
- Immigration and Citizenship
- International Criminal Law
- International Trade Law
- Islamic Law Seminar 1
- Law and Development Seminar 1
- Litigation in Civil Law Systems
- Military Law Seminar
- National Security Law
- Post-Conflict Justice and the Rule of Law 1
- Selected Problems in International Trade and Economics Seminar
- Terrorism and the Law Seminar 1
- Transnational Litigation
1This course satisfies the writing requirement.
2Students can choose to have this course satisfy the writing requirement or not.











