Graduate Programs Viewbook 2014
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Transcript of Graduate Programs Viewbook 2014
GRADUATE PROGRAMS
A Strong Tradition 4
Our Curriculum 6
Our Faculty 14
Gittis Center for Clinical Legal Studies 18
Toll Public Interest Center (TPIC) 20
International Studies at Penn Law 22
Our Collaborative Community 25
Student Services 28
Course Listing 32
Beyond the Classroom 36
Admissions 40
Penn Law Profile 44
A STRONG TRADITION
Our distinguished history began with that of the United States. Benjamin Franklin founded the University of Pennsylvania in 1740, and James Wilson — signer of the Declaration of Independence, framer of the U.S. Constitution, and one of the original U.S. Supreme Court Justices — presented Penn’s first lectures in law in 1790 to an esteemed audience, including President George Washington and members of his cabinet.
Since that historic time, Penn Law has been an innovator in legal education. The LLM Program is over a century old and recognized as among the best in the United States, attracting top students from around the world.
PENN LAW
“Penn Law is a world leader in legal education, uniquely equipping students with the knowledge and skills they need to excel in today’s legal marketplace, wherever their career aspirations and intellectual interests take them. Our faculty are celebrated scholars and devoted teachers, and the Law School has earned a well-deserved reputation for a collaborative, collegial culture that serves to support students in their legal training while making them better lawyers. I hope you enjoy learning more about our innovative, cross-cutting programs and the outstanding people that comprise the Penn Law community.”
Wendell PritchettInterim Dean and Presidential Term Professor
A STRONG TRADITION | 5
Penn Law’s graduate programs offer lawyers from across the globe a wide array of courses in traditional legal topics and emerging fields, from both U.S. and international perspectives. Students can also supplement their legal education with a course at the esteemed graduate and professional schools at the University of Pennsylvania.
OUR CURRICULUMIntegration of Knowledge
PENN LAW
OUR GRADUATE STUDENTS
The majority of students who enroll in our LLM program are foreign-trained law graduates who seek to become familiar with aspects of U.S. law and legal institutions or who would like to study and conduct research in a specialized field.
Our LLM program admits a select and diverse group of approximately 115 full-time students to work with our faculty in a rich, immersive, and cross-disciplinary curriculum. Graduate students, who study alongside their upper-level counterparts in the JD program, choose from a range of over 90 courses per semester, including Socratic classes, interactive seminars, and clinical offerings. LLM students may also take one complementary course in any of the University’s outstanding professional and graduate schools.
Also, LLMs are eligible to enroll in the Wharton Business and Law Certificate.
“Penn Law’s world-class professors and rigorous academic training make me feel better prepared to take on new challenges and pursue future goals. My experience here has been a great addition to my life — one that I will always reflect fondly upon.”
Samreen Malik Home Country: PakistanLLB, University of the Punjab LLB, University of London (External Program) BA, Kinnaird College for Women
OUR CURRICULUM | 7
PENN LAW
WHARTON BUSINESS AND LAW CERTIFICATE (WBLC)
Wharton Executive Education and the University of Pennsylvania Law School have combined to offer the WBLC to students enrolled in the LLM program. The certificate is ideally suited for internationally trained attorneys who seek to develop the business skills needed to compete in today’s complex legal environment.
It is designed for lawyers who wish to acquire:
• An understanding of business culture in the United States.
• Enhanced skills for the sophisticated presentation of investment propositions and financial projects.
• Management concepts for developing or professionalizing a practice, department, firm, or business enterprise.
The WBLC is specifically designed for LLM students and runs concurrently with the Penn Law LLM calendar. WBLC classes are held at Wharton, a short walk from the Law School.
For further information visit www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad.
“The WBLC is designed to let corporate lawyers know what business people are thinking.”
Hsin-Ning Liu LLM ’13 Home Country: TaiwanAssociate in Tax and Business Advisory Services at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu CPA LLP, Shanghai
OUR CURRICULUM | 9
Penn Law students thrive on the intellectual energy of their faculty and classmates. LLM students are fully integrated members of the Law School and take classes alongside upper-level JD students during the fall and spring semesters.
“During the Summer Program, LLM students have the opportunity to develop their U.S. legal writing and oral presentation skills in small classes and receive individualized feedback from faculty. Even experienced foreign attorneys report that they gain valuable skills that support both their studies at Penn Law and their practice after graduation.”
Eleanor Barrett L’05Associate Dean for Legal Practice Skills
PENN LAW
PENN LAW LLM SUMMER PROGRAM: FOUNDATIONS IN U.S. LAW AND CULTURE
Our innovative Summer Program provides an academic grounding in the U.S. legal system as well as social, cultural, and professional opportunities.
OUR CURRICULUM | 11
The program includes two introductory courses:
• Foundations of the U.S. Legal System: This three-semester-hour intensive survey course at an advanced level addresses aspects of U.S. legal thought and practice that are likely to be unfamiliar to most lawyers trained outside of the United States.
• U.S. Legal Writing/Research: This two-semester-hour course covers the basic skills of U.S. lawyering, including predictive analyses and writing, effective and efficient communication, and basic legal research.
The Summer Program also features programming from:
• Student Affairs Office: making the most of a year of study at a U.S. law school
• Career Planning & Professionalism Office: job search strategies, skills, and documents
• Registrar’s Office and Faculty Panel: course selection and registration procedures
There are numerous opportunities for social interaction including a city bus tour, a visit to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, team building exercises, a barbecue, and a banquet.
PENN LAW
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS
Masters of Law (LLM)
The LLM degree requires full-time attendance in both the fall and spring academic semesters in addition to the summer program. Students choose from the wide array of courses and research seminars that are part of the Law School’s JD program.
All LLM students can design a personal curriculum that focuses on a particular topic (e.g., international trade, cross-border regulation, criminal law, or human rights) or one that samples widely from topics in U.S. and international law.
LLM students may follow a course track or thesis track.
OTHER GRADUATE PROGRAMS
Master of Comparative Law (LLCM)
This program is a one-year course of advanced study for students who have already earned their LLM degree. LLCM candidates typically pursue a curriculum that concentrates on a particular field. While many of our LLCM students come from our population of Penn Law LLM alumni, we welcome applicants from other LLM programs.
Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD)
The SJD program provides an opportunity to conduct extensive research, culminating in a dissertation, under the guidance of faculty from Penn Law and, where appropriate, other professional schools and graduate departments of the University of Pennsylvania. Candidates must hold the LLM or equivalent degree from Penn Law or another law school of similar stature. The program is extremely selective and designed for students with specific, important research goals, and exceptional promise as academics.
The mission of Penn Law’s SJD program is to advance legal scholarship by producing graduates who have contributed significantly to their chosen area of study and who are prepared to become leaders in the international academic community.
Additional information and complete application instructions for these programs are available at www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad/.
OUR CURRICULUM | 13
OUR FACULTY Accessible Scholars and Devoted Teachers
The essence of a great law school is a great faculty. Since 2000, we have grown the Penn Law faculty by nearly 50 percent while holding the size of the student body steady. This has further strengthened the Law School’s academic rigor and fostered close, mentoring relationships between students and teachers.
Our professors are renowned and prolific scholars, publishing broadly-acclaimed books and articles that advance knowledge in the law and related fields. Nearly 70 percent of faculty members hold an advanced degree in addition to the JD.
“We are living at a time when it is impossible to be a successful
attorney without understanding how law and legal institutions
operate both within and beyond our own nations, and Penn’s LLM
Program ensures that everyone with a Penn Law degree develops
a deep comparative understanding of the law.”
Eric FeldmanProfessor of Law; Co-Director, Center for Asian Law
PENN LAW
55 full-time faculty
2/3with advanced degrees in addition to the JD
50% Penn Law faculty with secondary appointments
or affiliations with other Penn schools & programs
80+ adjuncts & lecturers
40+books recently published by faculty
450+articles recently published by faculty
INSTITUTES AND CENTERS
Dedicated to integrating knowledge, Penn Law professors lead cross-school and interdisciplinary centers at the University that attract scholars, experts, and practitioners from all fields and from around the world.
The 11 institutes and centers housed in the Law School sponsor groundbreaking research on vital issues facing society and host a vibrant calendar of lectures, symposia, conferences, and events.
Center for Asian Law
Center for Ethics & the Rule of Law
Center for Tax Law & Policy
Center for Technology, Innovation & Competition
Criminal Law Research Group
Institute for Law & Economics
Institute for Law & Philosophy
Legal History Consortium
Penn Program on Documentaries & the Law
Penn Program on Regulation
Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice
OUR FACULTY | 15
“Penn is a world-renowned university — one of the best in the academy. It is wonderful to teach at an institution where students are interested, smart, and prepared to think broadly about issues across fields. It makes a profound difference to have all of Penn’s graduate and professional programs within a 10-minute walk.”
Tom Baker William Maul Measey Professor of Law and Health Sciences
“I particularly like teaching at Penn because of its sense of community, the regard that students have for each other, and the cooperation and trust between faculty and students. There’s a genuinely special feeling about the place.”
Paul Robinson Colin S. Diver Professor of Law
“The most important issues facing our society are now debated through the framework of corporate law.”
Edward Rock L’83 Saul A. Fox Distinguished Professor of Business Law
PENN LAW
“China’s importance to the world economy and to fundamental issues of law and governance cannot be overstated. Our students need to understand the origin and evolution of legal institutions and practices in China and its neighbors.”
Jacques deLisle Stephen A. Cozen Professor of LawDirector, Center for East Asian Studies; Co-Director, Center for Asian Law
“The Entrepreneurship Clinic has real clients in the real world with real consequences and real impact — allowing students to apply the theoretical law that they’ve learned in other classes.”
Praveen Kosuri Practice Associate Professor of LawDirector, Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
“Internet policy must take into account how much the underlying technology and the demands being placed on the network are changing.”
Christopher S. YooProfessor of Law and CommunicationDirector, Center for Technology, Innovation and Competition
OUR FACULTY | 17
PENN LAW
GITTIS CENTER FOR CLINICAL LEGAL STUDIESDevelop Practical Skills
RECENTLY, CLINIC STUDENTS:
Worked with an inventor to protect his intellectual property.
Coordinated business transactions involving real estate acquisition and multi-staged financing.
Mediated an international child custody agreement between parents in two different countries.
Obtained a grant of asylum for a client facing certain harm if returned to his home country.
Drafted an employee handbook for a client and consulted on employment law matters to help the company avoid future litigation.
Successfully mediated an employment matter before the U.S. Equal Opportunity Commission preserving an employee’s benefits.
Gave presentations to entrepreneurs on legal topics affecting their businesses.
Apply theory to practice as you engage in legal advocacy and partner with lawyers and professionals from other disciplines. Live-client clinics and a public interest seminar provide you with expansive opportunities to apply your legal education at the intersection of law and a broad range of subject areas. LLM students may enroll in the following clinics:
• Entrepreneurship
• Intellectual Property and Technology
• Mediation
• Transnational Law
“Our clinics help students build strong relationships with diverse clients, develop essential lawyering skills, and apply their talents and creativity in a real world professional setting.”
Louis Rulli Director of Clinical Programs and Practice Professor of Law
GITTIS CENTER FOR CLINICAL LEGAL STUDIES | 19
TPIC is excited to welcome LLMs as full participants to Penn Law’s historic commitment to public service. As an integral part of the LLM program, pro bono work provides students with opportunities to gain valuable hands-on experience and develop core professional skills while learning about the communities that exist beyond the walls of Penn Law.
PENN LAW
TOLL PUBLIC INTEREST CENTER (TPIC)Integrate Service into Your Professional Life
“The opportunity that Penn provides in public interest prepares Penn Law students to go out in the world more prepared to contribute to the ideals of narrowing the gaps in society and the awesome appreciation of service to humanity.”
Ceaineh Clinton-Johnson Home Country: Liberia LLB, University of LiberiaBSc Economics, Cuttington University College
LLM PRO BONO OPPORTUNITIES
Every LLM is encouraged to complete at least 10 hours of public service prior to graduation.
TPIC also supports LLMs seeking to fulfill the New York Bar’s 50-hour pro bono requirement.
Recently LLM Students have:
• Volunteered with student groups including the Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) and the International Human Rights Advocates (IHRA).
• Conducted human rights research projects for various NGOs.
• Assisted on a veterans’ rights project.
• Provided translation services for underserved clients.
TOLL PUBLIC INTEREST CENTER | 21
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES AT PENN LAWA Global University
The University of Pennsylvania welcomes students, faculty, staff, alumni, and distinguished visitors from every corner of the world. With the largest number of international students in the Ivy League, we provide a vast array of opportunities and experiences for students with a wide variety of professional experience and academic training. Our vibrantly international community reflects the global nature of the legal profession, with diverse initiatives that make us one of the leading destinations in the world for students seeking to further their legal education.
PENN LAW
INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW FACULTY
Penn Law students engage with one of the nation’s most outstanding law school faculties. With diverse experience in international and comparative law, our faculty members bring to the classroom a broad global view of the role of law in society. In addition to standing faculty, Penn Law annually invites several internationally recognized experts in international and comparative law from around the world to Philadelphia.
CURRICULAR OPPORTUNITIES
Penn Law offers 30–35 courses each year focusing on international or comparative law. A special highlight among these is the innovative Global Research Seminar. This intensive research course explores complex global issues in private and public international law and builds toward an overseas field research visit when students and faculty jointly meet with primary stakeholders on key topics. Recent seminars have included: Internet Law & Policy (Germany and Belgium); Indian Private Law (India); and Islamic Finance (Malaysia)
“Penn Law offers an extraordinary Graduate Program that integrates foreign-trained lawyers into the Penn law curriculum, creates a truly international community, and provides an individually tailored graduate legal education that prepares attorneys for an ever growing range of transnational legal careers.”
William Burke-White Richard Perry Professor and Inaugural Director, Perry World House Deputy Dean for International Affairs
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES AT PENN LAW | 23
EXTRACURRICULAR OPPORTUNITIES
LLMs are encouraged to participate in our wide range of internationally focused student organizations, journals, and moot courts. Some of the most popular options have been:
• The University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law (JIL)
• East Asia Law Review (EALR)
• Eastern European Law Students Association (EELSA)
• Immigrant Rights Project
• International Human Rights Advocates (IHRA)
• International Law Organization (ILO)
• Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP)
• Latin American Law Students Association (LALSA)
• Muslim Law Students Association (MLSA)
• South Asian Law Students Association (SALSA)
• Jessup International Moot Court Team
• Willem C. Vis International Arbitration Moot Team
“LLM candidates brought not only real world legal knowledge, but their respective cultures and diversity of experiences into the classroom at Penn Law. I truly enjoyed the opportunity to become friends with people from Belgium, Greece, and Holland during my time at Penn.”
Anthony Heckman L’10Hometown: Los Angeles, CABA 2005 University of Southern California Associate, Morrison & Foerster (San Francisco)
Whoever you are and wherever you come from, the power of diversity at Penn Law creates a supportive and inclusive community where collaboration and teamwork are prized. We appreciate differences and are willing to engage colleagues and faculty in ways that respect, and even celebrate, the many differences in philosophy and experience that appear in a community as rich in ideas and backgrounds as Penn Law.
OUR COLLABORATIVE COMMUNITYThe Power of Diversity
PENN LAW
“The warmth and support of the Law School community bring out the best in every student. Even the professors temper their demands for excellence with compassion and humor. Penn Law has given me, as an LLM student, a home away from home and friendships that will last beyond my time in the United States.”
Sharmini Selvaratnam Home Country: Singapore LLB, National University of Singapore
OUR COLLABORATIVE COMMUNITY | 25
“Penn is a fulfilling experience — a melting pot of academic excellence, social activities, and cultural diversity. One year is way too short; try to get the best out of it!”
Antonio Arias Etchebarne Home Country: ArgentinaAbogado, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
“You will study with the cream of the crop from all over the world and enjoy countless social events — and still have time with your family.”
Yoko Motoyanagi Home Country: JapanBA Law, University of Tokyo
“What best exemplifies my time here is great learning in a great environment. My time at Penn exceeded all my expectations.”
Vijit ChaharHome Country: IndiaLLB, National Law School of India University
PENN LAW
“One of Penn’s historic strengths — something that sets us apart from most law schools — is our commitment to a spirit of collegiality.”
Gary Clinton Dean of Students and Counsel to the Dean
OUR COLLABORATIVE COMMUNITY | 27
STUDENT SERVICESA Supportive Environment, in the Classroom and Beyond
PENN LAW
“The LLM program at Penn — back in 1988 — gave me the opportunity to change my life: plain and simple. It has been the “business card” on which my professional history has been built: most of my clients — still today after more than 25 years — come from contacts, friends, and colleagues met back then at the Goat.”
Claudio Cocuzza LLM’88Senior Partner, Cocuzza & Associati, Studio Legale, Milan
STUDENT SUPPORT
Penn Law prides itself on providing its LLM and other students with unusually strong administrative support. Our Associate Dean for Graduate Programs, along with his staff, work closely with individual class members, encouraging all to take advantage of the wide variety of resources available to them. These go beyond the Law School’s academic offerings to include programming aimed at fostering social and professional interaction between graduate students and their JD counterparts, Penn Law faculty, and Law School alumni who have returned to their homes around the world.
Penn’s historic position in Philadelphia allows the Law School to offer a mentor program that links graduate students with internationally oriented members of the city’s legal community. LLM students enjoy access to alumni from Penn’s JD program, participate in networking events with international practitioners, and have other opportunities for interaction with legal, business, and other professionals based in Philadelphia and beyond.
“The LLM program is incredible journey where your classmates become your family with ties that last well after graduation.”
Gerardo Garcia-Fiad LLM’02Regional Corporate Counsel – Latin America at Alcatel-Lucent, Argentina
STUDENT SERVICES | 29
“Our mission at Penn Law is to provide our LLM students with a world-class academic experience undertaken in a culture of collegiality and professionalism, where students are made to feel welcome and supported and in which they can safely take risks that deepen and broaden their experience.”
Matthew Parker L’00Associate Dean of Graduate Programs
ALUMNI CLUBS
Penn Law’s Alumni Clubs are around the world:
Argentina BrazilChinaFranceGermanyGreece
“Our LLM alumni tell me year after year that their experience in Penn Law’s LLM Program was not only the best year of their lives, but a critical step in their development as an attorneys.”
Matthew Parker L’00Associate Dean of Graduate Programs
IndiaIsraelItalyJapanKorea
And we have Affinity Clubs:
PAALAS (Penn African-American Law Alumni Society)PLAAN (Penn Law Asian-American Alumni Network)PLES (Penn Law European Society)Penn Law Lambda Alumni Association
For more information:https://www.law.upenn.edu/cf/alumni/clubs/map/index.cfm
PENN LAW
CAREER PLANNING & PROFESSIONALISM
Penn Law’s Career Planning & Professionalism Office (CP&P) assists students with job searches and with enhancing professional skills. Penn Law has an LLM and International Career Counselor, who organizes programs designed specifically to LLM students, including resume and cover letter drafting, networking, interview skills, and an attorney mentor program. CP&P also brings in various speakers, including LLM alumni, throughout the year. Penn Law LLMs may also participate in the International Student Interview Program (“ISIP”) which brings LLMs and hiring employers from around the world to New York City in January.
The great majority of LLM students return directly to careers in their home countries, but each year many explore the possibility of staying in the U.S. to work, either on a temporary basis or on a more permanent basis. Unfortunately, it is difficult for LLM graduates from any LLM program in the United States to find a permanent law-related job in the United States today. However, CP&P counselors also work with LLMs individually to assist with designing a personalized job search strategy. They will review your resume and cover letters, conduct mock interviews, and answer career-related questions.
STUDENT SERVICES | 31
“Whether your career goals include seeking employment in the U.S. or elsewhere or returning to your employer, the Career Planning & Professionalism team is committed to helping you further develop professional skills during your LLM year. We provide both LLM-specific career programming and individual counseling for LLM students.”
Heather Frattone L’98Associate Dean for Professional Engagement
REQUIRED COURSES
Foundations of the U.S. Legal System
U.S. Legal Research and Writing
CONCENTRATIONS
ADMINISTRATIVE AND REGULATORY LAW
Administrative Law
Advanced Regulatory Law and Policy Seminar
Antitrust
Antitrust Law Seminar
Department of Justice Seminar
Education Law and Policy
Election Law
Energy Law and Climate Change
Introduction to U.S. Law and Legal Methods
Judicial Clerkship Seminar
Land Use Law
Introduction to Law and Economics
Law and Economics Seminar
Legal Responses to Inequality
Legislation
Money Laundering and Its Effect on Individual Rights in Post 9/11 Era
Pharmaceutical Regulation and Enforcement
Political Law
Race, Education, and the Law
Regulation of Health Insurance Markets
Regulatory Law and Policy Seminar
COURSE LISTINGA Curriculum Rich in Substance and Choice
Here, to give you a sense of the breadth of the curriculum, is a listing of courses taught in recent semesters. Note that, because our faculty is engaged in cutting-edge scholarship in all fields, our course and seminar roster changes frequently, and we cannot guarantee that any given course will be taught in any specific semester.
PENN LAW
Strategic Transactions in the Fashion and Retail Industry
Structured Finance and Securitization
Transactional Drafting
Transactional Lawyering
White Collar Crime and Capital Markets
Widening the Lens on Corporation Law: Canonical Cases
Writing for Practice
BUSINESS PLANNING AND ESTATE PLANNING
Bankruptcy
Business Bankruptcy: Chapter 11
Business Strategy and Corporate Law
Distressed Dealmaking: Chapter 11 and Out-of-Court Restructuring
Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
Financial Accounting
Legal Aspects of Entrepreneurship
Structured Finance and Securitization
Trusts and Estates
CIVIL LITIGATION: PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
Administrative Law
Advanced Problems in Federal Procedure
Antitrust
Appellate Advocacy
Civil Procedure
Commercial Litigation Strategy
Common Law Contracts for Civil Lawyers
Complex Litigation
Conflict of Laws
Constitutional Litigation
Contracts
E-Discovery
Evidence
Federal Courts
Insurance Law and Policy
International Civil Litigation
Judicial Clerkship Seminar
Introduction to Law and Economics
Lawyering in the Public Interest
Legal Interviewing and Client Counseling
Legislation
Mediation Clinic
Pretrial Litigation
Remedies
Supreme Court Clinic
Thinking Like a Litigator
Torts
Trial Advocacy
CLINICS
Detkin IP & Technology Clinic
Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
Mediation Clinic
Transnational Legal Clinic
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW AND CIVIL LIBERTIES
Administrative Law
Church and State
Comparative Constitutional Law
Conflict of Laws
Constitution and the Family
Constitution Outside the Courts: Theory and History
Constitutional Law
Constitutional Theory
Death Penalty in the U.S.: Theory and Practice
Election Law
Externship: Death Penalty (Federal Defender)
Federal Courts
BUSINESS AND TRANSACTIONAL LAW
Accounting
Advanced Corporate Law: M&A
Advanced Issues in Corporate law
Antitrust and Procedure
Antitrust
Business Strategy and Corporate Law
Challenges Facing the General Counsel
Contract Drafting
Corporate Finance
Corporate Finance: Legal Aspects
Corporations
Cross-Border M&A
Commercial Finance
Deals
Detkin IP & Technology Clinic
Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
Financial Accounting
Financial Crisis
General Counsel Seminar
Insurance Law and Policy
Intellectual Property and Corporate Lawyering
International Business Transactions
Islamic Finance
Law and Economic Reform in Contemporary China
Legal Aspects of Entrepreneurship
M&A Bootcamp
M&A Litigation Seminar
M&A Through the Business Cycle
Money Laundering and Its Effect on Individual Rights
Organizational Behavior
Public Interest Law and Entrepreneurship
Securities Bootcamp
Securities Regulation
COURSE LISTING | 33
First Amendment: Free Speech and Press
First Amendment in the 21st Century
Juvenile Justice
Legal Responses to Inequality
Marriage: History and Law
Parents, Children, and the State
Political Law
Political Philosophy of the U.S. Constitution
Race, Education, and the Law
Topics in Defamation
CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
Criminal Defense Clinic
Criminal Law
Criminal Law Research Group
Criminal Law Theory
Cybercrime
Death Penalty in the U.S.: Theory and Practice
Department of Justice Seminar
Evidence
Freedom and Responsibility
General Counsel Seminar
Juvenile Justice
Mental Health Law
Money Laundering and Its Effect on Individual Rights in Post-9/11 Era
Post-Conflict and Transitional Justice
Trial Advocacy
Visual Legal Advocacy
EMPLOYMENT LAW AND EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
Civil Pretrial Litigation
Employee Benefits
Employment Discrimination
Employment Law
Externship: Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission
Litigating Employment Class and Collective Actions
Mediation Clinic
Organizational Behavior
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
Advanced Regulatory Law and Policy Seminar
Animal Law and Ethics
Department of Justice Seminar
Directed Readings Seminar: Human Survival
Energy Law and Climate Change
Environmental Lawyering
International Environmental Law
International Law and International Relations
Land Use Law
Regulatory Law and Policy Seminar
FAMILY LAW
Anatomy of a Divorce
Constitution and the Family
Family Law
Juvenile Justice
Law and Sexuality
Parents, Children, and the State
Marriage: History and Law
HEALTH LAW
Animal Law and Ethics
Drug Production Liability Litigation
Freedom and Responsibility
Health Law and Policy
Insurance Law and Policy
Intellectual Property and National Economic Value Creation
Mental Health Law
Patent Law
Pharmaceutical Regulation and Enforcement
Public Health Law
Regulation of Health Insurance Markets
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND TECHNOLOGY LAW
Antitrust Law Seminar
Copyright
Cybercrime
Detkin IP & Technology Clinic
Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
GRS: Global Perspectives on Emerging Issues in Internet Law and Policy
Intellectual Property and National Economic Value Creation
Intellectual Property Litigation in the Digital Age
Intellectual Property Theory Colloquium
Intellectual Property Transactions
Internet, State Power, and Free Expression: The Evolution of Media Law and Policy
Introduction to Intellectual Property Law and Policy
Patent Law
Patent Law — Appellate Advocacy
Patent Litigation
Technology and Policy
Trademarks
INTERNATIONAL LAW
Bok Course: Federal Variety of Human Rights Protections in Europe
Common Law Contracts for Civil Lawyers
Comparative Constitutional Law
PENN LAW
Directed Reading Seminar — Human Survival: Science, Religion, Law
Education Law and Policy
Freedom and Responsibility
Intellectual Property and National Economic Value Creation
Internet, State Power, and Free Expression: The Evolution of Media Law and Policy
Jewish Law: The Rabbinic Idea of Law
Introduction to Law and Economics
Law and Economics Seminar
Law and Empire
Law and the Holocaust
Law and the Morality of War
Law and Society in Japan
Legal Responses to Inequality
Legal Scholarship and Academic Writing
Political Authority and Political Obligation
Political Philosophy of the U.S. Constitution
Problems in Law and Morality
Religion, Law, and Lawyering
Rule of Law: Policy and Practice
Urban Law: Contemporary Legal Problems
Visual Legal Advocacy
Writing About the Law
PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS
Law and the Morality of War
Professional Responsibility
Professional Responsibility and the Public Interest
Professional Responsibility: Ethical Corporate Lawyering
PROPERTY AND REAL ESTATE LAW
Deals
Entrepreneurship Legal Clinic
Environmental Lawyering
Land Use Law
Property
Real Estate Transactions
Trusts and Estates
SKILLS INTENSIVE
Advanced Legal Research
Appellate Advocacy
Contract Drafting
E-Discovery
Legal Interviewing and Client Counseling
Legal Practice Skills
Pretrial Litigation
Negotiation and Dispute Resolution
Negotiation Skills and Strategy
Practice of Law
Thinking Like a Litigator
Transactional Drafting
Trial Advocacy
Writing for Practice
TAX
Federal Income Tax
International Tax
Tax Policy Seminar
Partnership Tax
Taxation and Financial Products
Financial Accounting
Corporate Taxation
Global Research Seminar: Global Perspectives on Emerging Issues in Internet Law and Policy
Human Rights, Corporate Responsibility and ICT
Immigration Law
Intellectual Property and National Economic Value Creation
International Business Transactions
International Civil Litigation
International Commercial Arbitration
International Environmental Law
International Law and International Relations
International Human Rights
International Trade Regulation
Internet, State Power, and Free Expression: The Evolution of Medial Law and Policy
Islamic Finance
Law and Economic Reform in Contemporary China
Law and Empire
Law and the Holocaust
Law and Morality of War
Law and Sexuality
Law and Society in Japan
Litigation for Social Change
Post-Conflict and Transitional Justice
Public International Law
Refugee Law
Research in Foreign and International Law
Rule of Law: Policy and Practice
Transnational Legal Clinic
PERSPECTIVES ON LAW
Animal Law and Ethics
Church and State
Client Leverage and Law Firm Management
Cultural Heritage and the Law
COURSE LISTING | 35
CAMPUS WITHIN A CAMPUS
Built around a tree-lined central courtyard, Penn Law occupies the finest urban law school campus in America. Our four interconnected buildings integrate classrooms, faculty and administrative offices, and many gathering places to encourage interaction and engagement among faculty, students, and staff.
OUR UNIVERSITY
Penn Law is a small law school offering a rare blend of an inviting and green Ivy League university with global reach in the heart of a great city.
Enjoy world-class cultural performances at the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts. Tour inspiring exhibits at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the Institute of Contemporary Art, and the Fisher Fine Arts Library. Attend conferences and guest lectures at our sister schools. Work out in our state-of-the-art fitness facility, the Pottruck Center, with its four floors of fitness equipment, Olympic-size pool, and climbing wall.
Visit nearby popular stores, restaurants, cafes, cinema complex, and lovely parks. Admire the fine Victorian houses, many of which have been divided into affordable apartments. Follow Penn Park east across the Schuylkill River and experience everything that downtown Center City has to offer.
BEYOND THE CLASSROOMAn Exceptional Campus Environment in One of the United States’ Most Vibrant Cities
PENN LAW
BEYOND THE CLASSROOM | 37
PHILADELPHIA
City of Neighborhoods
There is no better place to study law than Philadelphia, America’s sixth-largest city and home to a vital legal community. Just a train ride from the nation’s political and financial capitals, the Law School’s location affords almost limitless internship and externship opportunities.
Moreover, with a reputation as one of the most livable cities in the country, Philly is lively and affordable. World-class museums, (sometimes) championship sports teams, a vibrant theater and art scene, and some of the nation’s best restaurants make our city a place where there is always something to see or do.
ART MUSEUM KIMMEL CENTER BOATHOUSE ROW THE LINC ITALIAN MARKET LOVE STATUE ELFRETH’S ALLEY ACADEMY OF MUSIC
SANSOM STREET RITTENHOUSE SQUARE CITIZENS BANK PARK INDEPENDENCE HALL READING TERMINAL MARKET
Credit: Photos by R. Kennedy & B. Krist for GPTMC
LOVE STATUE ELFRETH’S ALLEY ACADEMY OF MUSIC
Each year, Penn Law enrolls a select class of approximately 115 LLM students: academically gifted, professionally accomplished, intellectually curious, and culturally and geographically diverse. In addition, Penn Law enrolls a limited number of exceptional graduate students pursuing the LLCM and SJD degrees.
Our students come from all over the world, representing more than 35 countries in a typical year. They come from a broad spectrum of academic, professional, ideological and economic backgrounds. The majority of our LLM students have had at least one year of work experience following their law studies, and a significant percentage hold an advanced degree. This exciting diversity is, in itself, an integral component of our LLM program. It inspires a cross-fertilization of ideas and initiatives that enhances the intellectual rewards and professional transformation that characterize a Penn Law education.
We welcome your interest in joining this extraordinary community.
Matthew Parker L’00Associate Dean for Graduate Studies
ADMISSIONS
PENN LAW
HOW TO APPLY
LLM, LLCM and SJD candidates are required to submit
their applications via www.lsac.org
APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS
LLM
Applicants to the LLM program generally must hold a law degree such as a JD, LLB, or equivalent. Applicants currently enrolled as LLB students (or the equivalent) who are expecting to graduate in the spring are also welcome to apply.
The Graduate Programs Admissions Committee can, in some circumstances, admit students to the LLM program who do not already hold a law degree. Typically, such students will hold a graduate degree in a related field, will have already embarked on an academic or professional career, and/or are licensed to practice law in their home jurisdiction. The applicants must be able to show how legal training is important to the advancement of their career and/or their scholarly work and that they have sufficient legal training to be able to be successful in the program.
LLCM
Applicants to the LLCM program must either have completed an LLM program at a U.S. law school or are currently in an LLM program at a U.S. law school and will have completed the program prior to the beginning of the LLCM program. Traditionally, many of our LLCM students are Penn Law LLM alumni. However, we also welcome applicants with an LLM degree from another U.S. law school, especially those applicants who can demonstrate academic success in rigorous LLM program.
SJD
Applicants to the SJD program must have already earned an LLM or equivalent degree from Penn Law or another comparable institution. All applicants must have a well-stated scholarly agenda, with an area of research and appropriate research methodology clearly outlined. Candidates must, in addition, provide copies of scholarly work published in the English language. Admission to the program is based upon the evaluation of a candidate’s past record and future promise as a legal scholar.
ADMISSIONS | 41
STANDARDS FOR ADMISSIONS
Admission to Penn Law’s Graduate Programs is highly selective. We typically receive over 1,350 applications for 115 seats in the entering LLM class.
ENGLISH PROFICIENCY
Successful participation in Penn Law’s Graduate program requires a high level of English proficiency. Most coursework at Penn Law centers on a dialogue between the instructor and members of the class. Consequently, a student should be able to understand rapid, idiomatic English as spoken in class and in seminar discussions. Students must be able to express thoughts clearly in both spoken and written English and must read and write the language with ease. The quantity and quality of academic work required at Penn Law cannot be accomplished without such mastery of the English language.
All Graduate applicants must take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) exam or be granted a waiver. Penn Law does not have a minimum score requirement. In general, we look for a TOEFL score of at least 100 or IELTS score of 7.5. We also look at the breakdown for listening, speaking, writing, and reading to ensure that all indicate a high level of English proficiency. However, a lower score in one area or overall does not automatically preclude an applicant from consideration for Penn Law’s LLM program.
PENN LAW
DEADLINES
We begin accepting application materials after September 1.
November 15 Early Notification
LLM and LLCM applications must be complete by November 15 for Early Notification. Early Notification Applicants will be accepted, rejected, or deferred for further consideration by February 1.
December 15 Regular Notification
LLM and LLCM applications are due by December 15. Applicants will be accepted, rejected or wait-listed by mid-March. If you miss the deadline, you can request a deadline extension.
ADMISSIONS | 43
LLM ESTIMATED EXPENSES FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2014-15
Tuition $ 53,430
University & Law School fees 3,486
LLM Summer Program 2,650
Academic subtotal 59,566
Room & Board 14,350
Books 1,660
Clothing, laundry, personal expenses, medical insurance 6,000
Support subtotal 22,010
Total $ 81,576
Please note: Students planning to take a pre-term course in English as a Second Language will pay an additional fee of approximately $1,000 for that course. The Wharton Business and Law Certificate is also an additional cost of approximately $13,500.
Estimates will vary somewhat depending upon personal lifestyles and will likely increase incrementally each year.
See www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad for information on seeking a waiver of the TOEFL/IELTS score or alternative ways to demonstrate English proficiency.
FINANCING YOUR GRADUATE LEGAL EDUCATION
In an effort to sustain the exceptional diversity and quality of our LLM program, Penn Law has set aside merit scholarship funds for outstanding candidates, including a number of regionally based scholarships. Penn Law has also partnered with Fulbright in a number of countries to provide joint scholarships.
Penn Law also offers human rights scholarships for outstanding students with a substantial, demonstrated commitment to human rights. Our application requires an additional essay for students interested in applying for a human rights scholarship. We offer one or two of these scholarships each year, depending upon the depth of the applicant pool.
Because our ability to award assistance is limited, we encourage applicants to seek other funding sources. Many of our students receive scholarships from their employers, governments, or another third party. Other students are able to pay their expenses with their own savings or rely on family members for loans. Still others are able to receive loans or other financial aid from their home country.
For more information visit www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad.
March 15 SJD Deadline
All applications to the SJD program are due on March 15. Please confirm deadlines on our website at www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad as dates are subject to change.
PENN LAW PROFILE
PENN LAW
EXAMPLES OF LLM PRIOR EXPERIENCE:
• Capital markets associate
• Senior counsel for international bank
• Ethics & compliance manager
• Senior attorney for media company
• Securities litigation associate
• Patent litigation team leader
• Manager of anti-corruption activities for China Central Television
• In-house counsel at leading financial services group
• Sitting judges from Egypt, Korea, and Japan
• Research assistant for Justice of Supreme Court of India
• Advocate for human rights group
• Legal counsel for international humanitarian foundation
• Legal expert for Operations Department of Bank of Japan
• Senior legal associate at Toshiba Corporation
• Second Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the Republic of Korea
• Public prosecutors from Korea and Taiwan
• Senior legal counsel for compliance at an investment company
• Infrastructure and energy associate
• Pro bono counsel for protestors sued by government intelligence agency
• Head of legal global markets department for Moscow-based financial group
• Female Saudi law graduate interested in developing the Saudi legal system and women’s rights
• Head of legal for Antidoping Switzerland
• Tax attorney for Deloitte & Touche
• Legal expert – foreign investment in Russia
• Founder and managing partner for real estate venture company
• BBC reporter
• Law professor
Among Penn law’s historic achievements is our pioneering LLM program. Since the late 19th century, international lawyers, law professors, judges, government officials, and others have come here to further their understanding of United States and international law.
Graduate alumni include a former Justice of the Israeli Supreme Court, former Justice of South Africa’s Constitutional Court; a Presidential candidate in the Philippines, and General Counsel to Volvo. Their graduate classmates include hundreds of practitioners, government officials, business leaders, and scholars working in many fields across six continents.
PENN LAW PROFILE | 45
University of Pennsylvania Law School
3501 Sansom Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6204
Office of Graduate Programs
Telephone: 215.898.0407
Fax: 215.898.6979
Email: [email protected]
http://www.law.upenn.edu
All information in this viewbook is subject to change as our programs are constantly evolving. For the most up to date information, please visit our website at https://www.law.upenn.edu/admissions/grad/.
University of Pennsylvania Non-Discrimination Policy Statement
The University of Pennsylvania values diversity and seeks talented students, faculty and staff from diverse backgrounds. The University of Pennsylvania does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, creed, national or ethnic origin, citizenship status, age, disability, veteran status or any other legally protected class status in the administration of its admissions, financial aid, educational or athletic programs, or other University-administered programs or in its employment practices. Questions or complaints regarding this policy should be directed to the Executive Director of the Office of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Programs, Sansom Place East, 3600 Chestnut Street, Suite 228, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6106; or (215) 898-6993 (Voice) or (215) 898-7803 (TDD). The University of Pennsylvania must reserve the right to make changes affecting policies, fees, curricula, or any other matters announced in this publication or on its website.