Graduate Seminar: International Law at the Beginning of the 21st Century
Professor Dalton
LL.M Seminar 728
| 3 credit hours
This seminar is based on the UN's declaration of the final decade of the 1900s as the "Decade of International Law." Each student will prepare and present a substantial paper to the seminar. Students may choose from a range of topics on the state and development of international law as we enter the next century.
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This course is not currently scheduled.
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Prerequisite Courses:
Prerequisite: Basic course in International Law and eight hours of course work in the International Law program.
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Mutually Excluded Courses:
Students may not receive credit for both this seminar and any other Graduate Seminar.
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Notes:
LL.M. students matriculating in Fall 2005 are not required to complete a graduate paper to be eligible for graduating with distinction. [exception: Graduate Tax Scholars and COST Fellows.] LL.M. students who matriculated beginning in Fall 2003 or Fall 2004 must complete a graduate paper in their field of study if they wish to be eligible for graduation with distinction. LL.M. students who matriculated prior to Fall 2003 are required to complete a graduate paper as part of their degree requirement. The graduate paper requirement may be satisfied by successfully completing one of the Graduate Seminars or, if matriculation was in the 2003-2004 academic year, by completing either a Graduate Seminar or a Supervised Research project. [See "Graduate Paper Registration" in the schedule of courses] This Graduate Seminar cannot be dropped after the end of the add/drop period.
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