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Law and Society



Director of the Law and Society Program: David Karp

Affiliated Faculty:

American Studies:
Mary Lynn

Education: Dawn Riley

English: Mark Rifkin

Government: Beau Breslin, Roy Ginsberg, Ronald Seyb

History: Erica Bastress Dukehart, Matthew Hockenos

Management and Business: **Christine Kopec, Pushkala Prasad

Philosophy: William Lewis

Religious Studies: Stephen Butler Murray

Sociology: David Karp, Rik Scarce

Law and Society Steering Committee
**Pre-law advisor


The law and society minor involves students in the interdisciplinary study of law and justice, focusing on how laws are made, how they change, and how they are enforced. The Program encourages students to consider how law protects individual rights and ensures social order. Students are expected to think creatively about law in society, especially in how it may encourage social justice and good citizenship. As an interdisciplinary minor, the Program enables students to consider its central themes from a variety of perspectives, and synthesize them into a coherent personal philosophy. At the core of a liberal arts curriculum is the challenge for students to think critically about the world they live in, and to define their role as thoughtful and productive members of the community. Toward this end, the Program provides several opportunities for students to become involved in the local community through service-learning projects and internship opportunities.

THE LAW AND SOCIETY MINOR: The minor consists of a minimum of eighteen credit hours including:
  1. LW 200. Introduction to Law, Justice and Citizenship

  2. Twelve additional credit hours from the courses listed below as part of the Law and Society Program. These courses must come from at least three different disciplines. At least one course must be at the 300 level. No more than one course in the minor may also count toward the student's major.

  3. A capstone experience, usually taken in the student's senior year, which may be either an internship or, in special cases, an independent study: The internship (LW399) must involve a substantive work experience as well as a significant academic component. An independent study may be substituted for the internship as a capstone experience. The independent study may be either in Law and Society or within a specific department participating in the law and society minor. Designed by the student in consultation with a faculty advisor participating in the program, the independent study will consist of intensive research from an interdisciplinary perspective on an aspect of law and society. Students must obtain prior permission from the director of the program for either an independent study or an internship to count toward the minor.

Law and Society Curriculum

The following courses may be used to satisfy the requirements of the minor.

LW 200.    INTRODUCTION TO LAW, JUSTICE AND CITIZENSHIP    4
An examination of the role of law in regulating individual rights and social order. The course introduces the major themes of the Law and Society Program and the relationship between the key concepts of law, citizenship, and justice. General theories are applied to specific cases such as the death penalty, homeland security, and community justice. Students participate in service learning projects such as participation on the Integrity Board, mediation training, and writing clemency petitions for death row inmates.    B. Breslin, D. Karp

LW 210.    COLLEGE JUDICIAL PROCESS    1
An introduction to issues relevant to college disciplinary systems. This course will provide intellectual background and practical training for members of the Skidmore Integrity Board. The course will address issues such as philosophies of punishment, offender reintegration, community involvement, and strategies for effective sanctioning.    D. Karp

LW 251.    SPECIAL TOPICS IN LAW AND SOCIETY    3
An examination at the intermediate level of special topics, methods, and areas of law and society.

LW 351.    ADVANCED SPECIAL TOPICS IN LAW AND SOCIETY    3
An examination at the advanced level of special topics, methods, and areas of law and society.

LW 361.    LAW AND SOCIETY: CAPSTONE SEMINAR    1
Provides students the opportunity to tie together the course work and independent study in which they have engaged. Students will discuss over-arching issues in law, citizenship, and justice and will examine the different contributions of various disciplines to these topics. Seminar presentation of individual student work will be a central component of the course. This course is required of students who minor in law and society. Prerequisites: LW200 and at least three other courses in the Law and Society Program.

LW 371, 372.    INDEPENDENT STUDY IN LAW AND SOCIETY    3
Advanced-level reading and research in law and society under the guidance of a faculty member. Prerequisite: LW200 and two additional courses from the law and society curriculum. Requires approval of law and society director.

LW 399.    PROFESSIONAL INTERNSHIP IN LAW AND SOCIETY    3 or 6
Professional experience at an advanced level in law and society. With faculty sponsorship and approval of the program director, students may extend their law-related liberal arts experience into work in professional settings such as law firms, the criminal justice system, and relevant social service and governmental agencies. No more than three semester hours of LW 399 may be used to satisfy the minor requirements. Prerequisite: LW200 and two additional courses from the law and society curriculum. Non-liberal arts.

AM 260    Themes in American Culture: "Civil Rights in Twentieth-Century U.S."
AM 363    Women in American Culture
AM 376D    Religion in American Culture
ED 215    School and Society
EN 363    Race, Space, and Law in the 19th Century U.S.
EN 363    Law and Literature
ES 351    Environmental Legal Issues
GO 211    Courts, Politics, and Judicial Process in the United States
GO 213    Comparative Constitutional Systems
GO 301    Contemporary International Politics and Law
GO 311    Constitutional Law
GO 314    Civil Liberties
GO 362    Politics of the Congress
HI 224H    The Enlightenment
HI 258    European Fascism
HI 315    Crime and Punishment in Early Modern Europe (1400–1800)
HI 317    The Common Law and its Colonial Contexts
MB 333    Business Law I
MB 334    Business Law II
MB 336H    Diversity and Discrimination in the American Workplace: Is the Melting Pot Boiling Over?
MB 355    Business, Ethics and Society
PH 211    Ethics
PH 304    Socio-Political Philosophy
RE 204    Religious Ethics
SO 213    Crime and Victimization
SO 328    Social Movements and Collective Action
SO 329    Criminal Justice
SW 338    Social Policy and Social Justice





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