LGLS10A, INTRODUCTION TO LAW, SPRING 2009

LGLS10A

INTRODUCTION TO LAW

Fall 2015 Mr. Breen

This course surveys the nature, process, and institutions of law. It explores the reasoning patterns of lawyers and judges;

the interplay of judicial cases and legislative policies; the impact of history and culture on resolving legal conflicts; and

the ideals ofjustice and responsibility in both domestic and international law.

This survey course will help students meet the following learning goals:

Knowledge: developing critical awareness of the gap between “real law” and popular stereotypes; distinguishing legal perspectives from related concerns in other disciplines (political expediency, economic efficiency, moral perfection); clarifying purposes for dividing legal power among courts, legislatures, and executive officials; relating international law to national and state legal systems.

Skills: understanding and practicing modes of legal reasoning; finding authoritative sources for legal rules; increasing oral and written facility in expressing arguments under legal constraints.

Justice: grasping the challenges of reaching justice through law; putting the range of justice goals in historical context; testing your own justice commitments against current American and global problems.

Further goals and specific requirements for the course are spelled out in discussion sections.

Required texts (available at the Brandeis Bookstore):

Russell Banks, The Sweet Hereafter (Harper Collins, 1991)

David S. Tanenhaus, The Constitutional Rights of Children(Univ. of Kansas, 2011)

All additional readings are available electronically on the course Latte site.

Weekly schedule:

The class normally meets Mondays and Wednesdays at 9 a.m. for lectures in Olin-Sang 101.

The class will also meet on Thursday, Sept. 4th.

Discussion sections 1-5 meet Wednesdays at 7 p.m. in rooms to be announced (beginning September 10).

Discussion sections 6-10 meet Thursdays at 9a.m. in rooms to be announced (beginning September 11).

For syllabus updates, class assignments and notices, and links to additional readings, consult Latte.

Lecture dates and weekly reading assignments:

August 27: Basic themes: justice and responsibility. The rule of law as a legal principle.

September 2: The rule of law as a legal principle

Readings (on LATTE): Totten v. United States (1875, U.S. Supreme Court)

Vu Doc Guong v. United States (1988, US Court of Appeals)

September 3:The role of the judge in formulating legal rules.

Thomas v. Winchester (1852)

(on LATTE)

September 9 The subtle evolution of legal rules

Loop v. Litchfield (1870)

Losee v. Clute (1873)

Devlin v. Smith (1882)

Torgeson v. Schultz (1908)

(all on LATTE)

September 10Old rules in modern settings; voices of the community.

MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. (1916)

(on Latte)

September 16: Voices of the Community

Engel, “The Oven Bird’s Song: Insiders, Outsiders, and Personal Injuries in an American

Community”

Restatement of Law (Torts) 2d, Section 402A

September 21: Using civil litigation to address complex social problems

Young v. Bryco Arms (2004, Illinois Supreme Court)

(on Latte)

Exercise No. 1 due at the beginning of class on Monday, Sept. 21

September 22, 29 Legislation: the Clean Water Act

(Readings TBA)

October 5-7 Ethics and community values in the pursuit of justice

Banks, The Sweet Hereafter (read entire book by Oct. 7)

October 12-14 Statutes and Property Relations: what is “intellectual property?”

Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics (2013) (on Latte)

October 19 Law and Innovation: the Story of Sony v. Universal Studios

October 21 Statutes in an evolving society: what to do about “fracking?”

Exercise #2 due at the beginning of class, Wednesday, October 21

October 26 The Constitutional Revolution in criminal law

Tanenhaus, The Constitutional Rights of Children pp. 3-49

Mapp v. Ohio (1961)

Miranda v. Arizona (1966)

Furman v. Georgia (1976)

(All on Latte)

October 26-28 What Process is “Due;” the Enduring Controversy over the Rights of Children

Tanenhaus, The Constitutional Rights of Children, pp. 49-128

Roper v. Simmons(2005)

Graham v. Florida (2010)

Miller v. Alabama (2012)

(All on Latte)

November 2 Fixing Errors in the Criminal Justice System

Garrett, “Judging Innocence” (2008) (on Latte)

November 4Social norms in the jury box: of Dueling and Assisted Suicide

November 9-11 Personal privacy and national security: the national, and international, legal framework

Olmstead v. U.S. (1928)

Smith v. Maryland (1979)

U.S. v. Jones (2012)

Riley v. California (2014)

Exercise # 3 due at the beginning of class on Monday, Nov. 16

November 16-18 International Law: the Rule of Law on the World Stage

Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (1978) (excerpts)

USA-Patriot Act (2001) (excerpts)

(both on LATTE)

November 23 NSA Surveillance in Constitutional Context

Klayman v. Obama (2014) (on Latte)

November 25: No Class (Thanksgiving Holidays)

December 7: Contract Law: Public Limits on Private Bargains

Sherwood v. Walker (1887) (On Latte)

December 9: Final Thoughts on the Rule of Law

Exercise #4 Due at the Beginning of Class, Dec. 9

Final Examination: Date and Time TBA