Criminal Justice Electives
All students are required to take Criminal Law during their first year.
The following electives are available to students during their second and third years of law school; although not all are offered every year:
- Actual Innocence
- Advanced Evidence and Trial Advocacy
- Advanced Topics in International Humantarian Law
- Advanced Topics in Juvenile Justice Short Course
- Appellate Litigation Clinic
- Appellate Practice and Procedure
- Comparative Perspectives on Counter-Terrorism
- Criminal Law Seminar
- Criminal Practice Clinic
- Criminal Procedure: Adjudication (Formerly Criminal Practice and Procedure)
- Criminal Procedure: Investigation (Formerly Criminal Constitutional Law)
- Criminal Procedure: Social Science Perspectives Seminar
- Domestic Violence Clinic
- Domestic Violence Law
- Externship Program
- Federal Criminal law
- International Criminal Law
- Juvenile Justice
- Juvenile Justice Seminar
- Law and the Brain (formerly Law & Neuroscience)
- Law and the Emotions Seminar
- Law, Biology, and Human Behavior Seminar
- Litigating the Capital Punishment Case
- Mental Health Law: Deprivations of Liberty
- Methods & Ethics of Information Gathering
- National Security Law
- Negotiation
- Pre-Trial Litigation
- Psychology and Criminal Law Seminar
- Race and the Law
- Responsibility, Liability, and Punishment Seminar
- Sentencing, Corrections and Punishment
- Social Choice, Fairness and the Law
- Treatment of Scientific Evidence
- Trial Advocacy
- White Collar Crime Seminar