FALL 2013 CLASS SCHEDULE As of: 12/3/2013 NOTES ON 2013/2014 SCHOOL OF LAW CALENDAR NOTICE: UPPER-DIVISION WRITING AND SKILLS REQUIREMENT The faculty has enacted an upper-division writing requirement and an upper division skills requirement as mandated for all law schools by the ABA. Courses that provide an opportunity to fulfill the writing requirement and the skills requirement are identified in the schedule. For more information about these requirements, please see sections 14.12 and 14.13 of the Academic Policy Statement at http://law.pepperdine.edu/academics/policy/. NOTICE: PRIORITY ENROLLMENT FOR STRAUS DISPUTE RESOLUTION ELECTIVES Students participating in either the dispute resolution certificate or master's in dispute resolution program will receive priority enrollment in all dispute resolution elective courses, with the exception of the Alternative Dispute Resolution course. Students not participating in either program may place themselves on a waitlist and seat availability will be determined at the beginning of the semester. Seats not filled by program participants will be released to JD students on the waitlist. 1 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW PROFESSORS JEFFREY R. BAKER (Director of Clinical Education; Lawyering Process): Professor Baker joins the School of Law as the Director of Clinical Education and Associate Clinical Professor of Law. He is an experienced litigator, trial lawyer and teacher. From 2006 - 2013, Baker was an associate professor of law and Director of Clinical Programs at Faulkner University Jones School of Law in Montgomery, Alabama, where he was Professor of the Year in 2011-2012. At Faulkner Law, Professor Baker taught the Family Violence Clinic, designed and launched the Elder Law Clinic, and supervised the Externship Program. He has taught Pre-Trial Practice, Law & Literature, and Advanced Topics in Family Law. Professor Baker is a mediator, and has coached the school’s national championship winning teams in the ABA Representation in Mediation Competition. His scholarship addresses domestic violence and gender justice in families, including intersecting fields of moral philosophy, religion, legal history, social science, and multidisciplinary professional responses. Prof. Baker speaks regularly on clinical education, professional formation, lawyering and social justice. Prof. Baker graduated from Vanderbilt University Law School before returning to practice law in his home state of Mississippi. With the firm of Watkins & Eager, Prof. Baker had a diverse trial and appellate practice in health care, mass tort, products liability, pharmaceutical liability, medical malpractice, insurance, toxic tort and personal injury litigation. In Montgomery, while at Faulkner Law, Prof. Baker received the Montgomery Advertiser’s Martin Luther King Spirit Honors award and the Justice for Victims Award from the area domestic violence shelter. He has served as co-chair of the Montgomery County Task Force on Domestic Violence, on the Pro Bono Task Force for the Alabama State Bar, on organizing committees for the One Place Family Justice Center, on Faulkner’s Institute for Faith & the Academy, and on the Interdisciplinary Practice Committee for the clinical section of the Association of American Law Schools PAUL L. CARON (Federal Estate and Gift Taxation): Paul L. Caron served as the D & L Straus Distinguished Visiting Professor at Pepperdine in the spring semesters in 2010-2013 before joining the tenured faculty in Fall 2013. He previously was Associate Dean of Faculty and Charles Hartsock Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. He is one of the leading entrepreneurial tax scholars in the country. Professor Caron has written numerous books and law review articles, including most recently Federal Wealth Transfer Taxation (Foundation Press, 6th ed. 2009 & 2012 Supp.) (with Paul McDaniel & Jim Repetti); Tax Stories (Foundation Press, 2d ed. 2009); Tax Advice for the Second Obama Administration, 40 Pepp. L. Rev. ___ (2013); and Occupy the Tax Code: Using the Estate Tax to Reduce Inequality and Spur Economic Growth, 40 Pepp. L. Rev. ___ (2013) (with Jim Repetti). He delivered the keynote address at the 2013 USC Gould School of Law Tax Institute. He serves as Series Editor for two publishers in developing over 50 books for use by law students: the Law Stories Series of books published by Foundation Press; and the Graduate Tax Series of books published by LexisNexis for use in Tax LL.M. programs. In addition, Professor Caron is the Publisher and Editor of Tax Prof Blog, the most popular tax blog on the Internet; and Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of the Law Professor Blogs Network of more than 40 blogs in other areas of law edited by law professors around the country. He is VicePresident of the Board of Directors of the Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI) and a member of the LexisNexis Law School Publishing Advisory Board. He is the Herzog Summer Visiting Professor in Taxation at the University of San Diego School of Law and also has served as a visiting professor at the University of Florida College of Law, Florida State University College of Law, and New York University/IRS Office of Chief Counsel Continuing Professional Education Program. ANN CHING (Legal Research & Writing): Prior to joining the Pepperdine Law faculty, Professor Ching served in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps, where her distinctions include the Bronze Star Medal for combat service in Iraq and the Humanitarian Assistance Medal for Japan earthquake relief. During her Army career, Professor Ching served in positions including Associate Professor of Legal Research & Writing and Editor in Chief, Military Law Review (The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center & School, Charlottesville, VA); Chief of Military Justice and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney, U.S. Military Academy (West Point, NY); and International Law Advisor, U.S. Army Pacific (Honolulu, HI). Professor Ching has presented and written on topics including civil liberties in wartime, international war crime tribunals, domestic and international disaster relief, criminal jury trials, and legal ethics. Her work has been published in the North Carolina Journal of International Law & Commercial Regulation, The Encyclopedia of American Civil Liberties, The Army Lawyer, and Military Law Review. Professor Ching received a B.A. from the University of Arizona (Distinguished Military Graduate, summa cum laude), J.D. from the University of North Carolina (High Honors, Order of the Coif), and LL.M. in Military Law from The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center & School (Honor Graduate, Best Research Paper). Professor Ching is a member of the Arizona Bar and a Major in the U.S. Army Reserve. 2 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW PROFESSORS (continued) DAVID HAN (Torts): David Han is an Associate Professor of Law at Pepperdine University School of Law. His scholarship focuses on First Amendment law and tort law. Before joining the Pepperdine faculty in 2013, Professor Han was an Acting Assistant Professor of Lawyering at New York University School of Law. He also practiced as a litigation associate with Munger, Tolles & Olson in San Francisco, where he worked on a broad range of trial and appellate matters. Professor Han received a B.A. with distinction, magna cum laude, in English Language and Literature from Yale University. Before entering law school, he worked as a strategic planning analyst at Morgan Stanley in New York. He received his J.D., magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School, where he served as the Notes Chair of the Harvard Law Review. After graduation, he clerked for the Honorable Michael Boudin on the First Circuit Court of Appeals and for the Honorable David H. Souter on the Supreme Court of the United States. VICTORIA SCHWARTZ (Entertainment Law, Intellectual Property Survey): Victoria Schwartz joins the Pepperdine faculty from the University of Chicago Law School where she was a Bigelow Teaching Fellow and Lecturer in Law. At the University of Chicago, Professor Schwartz taught a seminar entitled Business Perspectives on Workplace Privacy as well as legal research and writing. Prior to joining the University of Chicago, Professor Schwartz practiced as a litigation associate as part of the Business Trial and Litigation practice of the Century City, California office of O’Melveny & Myers LLP. Professor Schwartz’s practice focused on complex and appellate litigation, contract law, entertainment law, and intellectual property. While at O’Melveny, Professor Schwartz taught at the UCLA Ninth Circuit Appellate Clinic and co-authored an article about areas of uncertainty in trademark law. She graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School in 2007, where she was the Senior Editor of the Harvard International Law Journal. Following graduation, Professor Schwartz clerked on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for the Honorable Jay S. Bybee. She graduated in 2004 from Stanford University where she received a B.A. in Political Science with honors and distinction, a B.A. in Slavic Languages and Literatures with distinction, and a B.S. in Mathematics with distinction, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Dobro Slovo National Slavic Honors Society. Her research interests include contract and business law, employment law and discrimination, privacy law and intellectual property. AHMED TAHA (Corporations, Civil Procedure): Prior to joining Pepperdine, Ahmed Taha served as Professor of Law at Wake Forest University School of Law. His research focused primarily on empirical studies of consumer and investor protection law. This research reflects both his training in law and in economics in which he holds a Ph.D. His research has been discussed in national media outlets, including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. He was also the 2011 recipient of the Joseph Branch Excellence in Teaching Award at Wake Forest Law School. Prior to teaching, Professor Taha was an attorney in the Antitrust Division of the U. S. Department of Justice in Washington, D. C., an associate with Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in Palo Alto, California, and a corporate finance analyst at McKinsey and Company in New York. 3 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM VISITING PROFESSOR RICHARD CHEN (Contracts): Richard Chen is joining the faculty as a visiting assistant professor this academic year. He previously served as a law clerk for two judges, the Honorable Raymond Fisher and the Honorable Paul Watford, both of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Between his two clerkships, Professor Chen practiced for two years at Munger, Tolles & Olson in Los Angeles, specializing in civil litigation. He received his J.D. from Harvard Law School, where he was an articles editor of the Harvard Law Review. During law school, he interned at the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office and the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, and prior to law school, he served as an intern in the Cambodia office of International Justice Mission, where he worked with trafficking victims. His research interests include international law and international human rights. NEW ADJUNCT FACULTY MEMBERS STEPHANIE C. BUCKLEY (Internet Law): As the Associate Vice Chancellor at Pepperdine University School of Law, Professor Buckley works with current and prospective donors raising planned and major gifts on behalf of the University. She assists donors with the preparation of their estate plan including identifying and creating estate and financial planning tools specific to donors’ needs. Professor Buckley organizes various planned giving and estate planning presentations on behalf of Pepperdine University and assists with training for all of Pepperdine’s fundraisers. Professor Buckley is currently researching and writing on ownership of electronic assets and how those assets are transferred through the estate planning process. Professor Buckley earned her law degree from UCLA School of Law with a specialization in Taxation and Business Law. She completed her LL.M. in Taxation with Honors at Loyola Law School. She is a former trustee for the Heifer International Foundation and is a past president for both the Partnership for Philanthropic Planning of Greater Los Angeles and the Partnership for Philanthropic Planning of Ventura County. She is an instructor for the Planned Giving course offered through UCLA Extension and currently serves on the Editorial Advisory Board for Planned Giving Today. Professor Buckley is a member of the State Bar of California. MAKAN DELRAHIM (Government Regulation of Entertainment and Sports): Mr. Delrahim is a partner at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP, in both the Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. offices. He is a frequent commentator and author on competition law and intellectual property issues. Mr. Delrahim is a former Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Department of Justice Antitrust Division, appointed by President George W. Bush, and served as a member of the U.S. Attorney General’s Task Force on Intellectual Property. His responsibilities included the Antitrust Division’s international, appellate litigation and policy development matters. During his tenure at the Department of Justice, he played key roles in the Department’s enforcement and policy development on emerging matters at the intersection of antitrust and intellectual property. In addition, he served as Chairman of the Merger Working Group of the International Competition Network (ICN). Prior to his service at the U.S. Department of Justice, he served as staff director and chief counsel of the Senate Judiciary Committee, working as the principal legal and policy advisor on matters within the Committee’s jurisdiction for thenChairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-UT). It is estimated that approximately 65 percent of all federal legislation are wholly or partially within the jurisdiction of the Judiciary Committee, in addition to the confirmation of all Department of Justice presidential appointees and appointees to the federal bench. His accomplishments include historic legislation in the areas of bankruptcy, class action litigation and patent law reform, various copyright legislation as well as the USA Patriot Act. He was also the principal staff architect of landmark asbestos litigation reform legislation. From 2003-2007, Mr. Delrahim served as a commissioner on the U.S. Antitrust Modernization Commission. The Commission was created by Congress to perform a comprehensive evaluation of antitrust laws, report to Congress and the President on its findings, and make policy and legislative recommendations. 4 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW ADJUNCT FACULTY MEMBERS (continued) DANIEL DeWALT (Faith, Leadership and Practicing Law): Danny DeWalt is a partner in the law firm Goff & DeWalt, LLP and has over 15 years of experience in construction defect litigation. Mr. DeWalt received his B.A. in psychology from Cal State Bakersfield, an M.Div. from Princeton Theological Seminary, an M.A. in Marriage and Family Therapy from Pacific Lutheran University and his J.D. from California Western School of Law. Mr. DeWalt is an adjunct professor at Pepperdine University School of Law. He is the vice president of Restore International, a non-profit organization that finds audacious ways to bring justice to children and the poorest of the poor. Restore is presently focused on its Restore Leadership Academy in Gulu, Uganda where Restore is training the future leaders of Uganda. He, together with his wife Amy, have written two books on leadership in marriage and parenting and frequently lead conferences in the U.S. and Europe on those topics. Mr. DeWalt is also one of the teaching pastors at his church in Gig Harbor, Washington. JO ANNE FRANKFURT (Employment Law Mediation Clinic: California Department of Fair Employment and Housing) Jo Anne Frankfurt served for over 12 years as an Administrative Law Judge for the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission (FEHC). While at the FEHC, Judge Frankfurt adjudicated and mediated employment discrimination cases, including complex sexual harassment cases. Judge Frankfurt, who has extensive knowledge of the Fair Employment and Housing Act, also drafted regulations and legislation sponsored by the FEHC. Prior to her work at the FEHC, Judge Frankfurt litigated employment discrimination cases for over 13 years in the state and federal courts. Currently, Judge Frankfurt has a training and mediation private practice and is the Supervising Mediator at the Department of Fair Employment and Housing, Alternative Dispute Division. ERIN GLEASON (Selected Issues in Dispute Resolution: Managing Litigation and Conflict for Corporations and Organizations) Erin Gleason Alvarez serves as Director of Legal Strategies for AIG, where she has worked for six years. Erin oversees the development and implementation of corporate initiatives to reduce legal costs, including the management of AIG’s Alternative Dispute Resolution programs. Erin is an active member of the International Institute for Conflict Prevention and Resolution (CPR), where she serves on the Executive Advisory Committee and Mediation Committee. In January 2008, she was honored by CPR with an award for her article, “International Arbitral Appeals: What Are We So Afraid Of?” Erin received an L.L.M. in Dispute Resolution from the Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution, Pepperdine University School of Law, in 2006. Prior to her studies, Erin practiced commercial and employment litigation in New York City. BOB GOFF (Faith, Leadership and Practicing Law): Bob Goff is a practicing attorney with over 25 years of litigation experience. Mr. Goff is the founding partner of Goff & DeWalt, LLP which is a West Coast law firm specializing in construction defect litigation and community association representation. He is licensed in multiple states and has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for clients in construction defect cases. Mr. Goff is an adjunct professor at Pepperdine University School of Law. He received his B.A. from San Diego State University and his J.D. from the University of San Diego School of Law. Mr. Goff is also a nationally recognized author and speaker. His recent book, Love Does: Discover a Secretly Incredible Life in an Ordinary World is a NY Times Best Seller. He is also the president of Restore International, a non-profit organization that finds audacious ways to bring justice to children and the poorest of the poor. Restore is presently focused on its Restore Leadership Academy in Gulu, Uganda where Restore is training the future leaders of Uganda. 5 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW ADJUNCT FACULTY MEMBERS (continued LINDA RANDLETT KOLLAR (Business Development for Lawyers): Linda Randlett Kollar is a partner in the Los Angeles office of Hooper, Lundy & Bookman, P.C., a firm dedicated to the representation of healthcare providers. With more than 25 years of legal experience, she is recognized by her clients and peers as an accomplished litigator, health law regulatory expert and champion of behavioral healthcare providers. Her clients include non-profit organizations that provide residential treatment and foster care for children, physicians, psychologists, licensed clinical social workers and marriage and family therapists. Professor Kollar received her Juris Doctorate, cum laude, from Pepperdine University, where she was Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review. She credits her success to her passionate interest in the law and her work. Professor Kollar devotes a substantial part of her practice to advising behavioral healthcare providers on licensure, compliance and contracts, special education, privacy, confidentiality, HIPAA and minor’s consent issues. As a seasoned litigator, she regularly represents her provider clients in administrative and civil litigation, including writs and appeals. She is a nationally recognized expert and consultant regarding legal issues affecting child welfare organizations. Professor Kollar is a member of the firm’s Business Development Committee. She initiated and leads the firm’s business development program which provides associates and partners with strategies on effective marketing and business development. She is also an active participant in the firm’s diversity initiative. ANDREA SHERIDAN ORDIN (The Government Lawyer): Professor Ordin brings a unique perspective to her course "The Government Lawyer" having served more than 25 years in local, state and federal law offices, as well as practicing as a partner and senior counsel in the Los Angeles office of Morgan, Lewis and Bockius, frequently opposing governmental agencies. She has served as the Assistant District Attorney of Los Angeles, the United States Attorney for the Central District of California, only the third woman in United States history to hold the post, California Chief Assistant Attorney General, and most recently, Los Angeles County Counsel from 2010 to 2012. In addition to her management positions in those offices, she regularly argued on behalf of her governmental clients in the state and federal trial and appellate courts, including 10 arguments in California Supreme Court and one in the United States Supreme Court. Currently serving as the President of the Los Angeles Police Commission, she has a long history of civic activity, including serving on the Christopher Commission in the wake of the Rodney King beating, President of the Los Angeles County Bar Association, and Chair of the ABA Committee on Judicial Independence. BRIAN F. SIMAS (Wine Law): is chair of the Wine Industry Practice Group at Kirk & Simas, PLC, a Santa Maria, California based law firm located in the heart of the state’s Central Coast wine region. He serves as counsel to wine and agribusiness enterprises throughout the state, handling a diverse array of transactional matters with particular focus in alcoholic beverage licensing and compliance; entity selection and formation; winery mergers and sales; raw land and vineyard acquisition, development, and leasing; land use and winery ordinances; grape and wine sales agreements; marketing, broker and distributor agreements; trademarks; and business succession and estate planning. Professor Simas obtained his undergraduate education from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, graduating with honors and dual degrees: a B.S. in Wine and Viticulture and a B.S. in Agricultural Business. He received his Juris Doctor from Pepperdine University School of Law where he focused his coursework on business and real estate law. A native of Santa Maria, Professor Simas returned to the Central Coast after graduating from Pepperdine to join Kirk & Simas, PLC as an associate attorney and pursue a practice in wine law. Today, he represents some of the central coast’s largest winery and vineyard operations, vineyard managers, and retail establishments including Bien Nacido Vineyards, Hampton Farming, Resource Land Holdings, Central Coast Wine Services, Presqu’ile Winery, and Caveau SB. Brian additionally holds leadership positions in several civic and charitable organizations, including board of directors positions with La Cuadrilla Foundation, Santa Maria Valley Wine Country Association, Court Appointed Special Advocates of Santa Barbara County, and the Boys and Girls Club of Santa Maria Valley. 6 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW COURSES BEING OFFERED - FALL 2013 EMPLOYMENT LAW MEDIATION CLINIC: DEPARTMENT OF FAIR EMPLOYMENT AND HOUSING: The Clinic is a two-credit per semester course. This Clinic offers students the opportunity to mediate employment and housing discrimination lawsuits through the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), the nation's largest state civil rights agency responsible for enforcing the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), Unruh Civil Rights Act, Ralph Civil Rights Act, and Disabled Persons Act. Under the supervision of experienced DFEH mediators, students convene cases, observe and mediate cases, and explore possible case resolution through settlement negotiations. Clinic participation includes, 1) fourteen hour intensive format, 2) attendance in a bi-weekly class covering both substantive sections of the FEHA and advanced application of mediation techniques, periodic guest lectures by practicing private counsel and FEHA attorneys, and 3) participation and attendance at mediations and subsequent debriefs. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION: This course explores the ethical considerations affecting the work of arbitrators, counsel and experts in international arbitration. Issues will include the arbitrator obligations of independence and impartiality, conflicts of law problems facing counsel in transnational arbitration, practice restrictions governing the work of arbitrators and counsel in international arbitration and texts bearing on the unification of ethical standards. This course studies the complementary and sometimes antagonistic role of national courts in the international arbitration process in light of treaty mandates, internationally recognized jurisdictional limits, arbitral legislation and case law doctrine. The focus is on comparing court decisions in the United States with decisions from various other jurisdictions. FAITH, LEADERSHIP AND PRACTICING LAW: This course is designed to challenge and train law students to strengthen their faith, develop their leadership, and cultivate their character. Specifically, the class sessions will focus on integrating faith, leadership and character in the practice of law. Our hope is to develop professional leaders who will pursue justice in the world as the highest of callings. Students will read, reflect on, and discuss books on faith, law practice, justice, and leadership. GLOBAL JUSTICE PRACTICUM: The objective of the Global Justice Practicum is for students to work on one or more projects dealing with current international criminal law and human rights issues. The student will work directly with the professor and an international criminal law or human rights organizations. The student will work on one or more projects which may include research papers, creating legal writing and analysis teaching materials to be used in other countries, and preparing drafts of court documents, manuals and other legal materials to aid such organizations. While there are no prerequisites, a class in public international law or war crimes is strongly preferred. GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS: This course focuses on impact of the federal legislative process on the entertainment, sports and gaming industries. Students will learn the nuts and bolts of legislation in these areas, crisis management, and congressional investigations through practical problem solving exercises. This course is designed to be equally instructive to the student who intends either: to pursue an entrepreneurial business path in the entertainment and sports fields; to enter the corporate workforce; or to join the traditional practice of law. Practical problem-solving exercises in the course will involve a fictitious entertainment entity which will have a realworld legal, business, or regulatory problem, and students will design a plan to solve that problem with an effective and comprehensive public policy advocacy strategy. HOSPITAL LAW: Hospitals make up the cornerstone of the American health care system, yet their evolution, codified in four centuries of federal and state law, has resulted from a multitude of diverse factors. Some of the driving forces behind these changes include advances in technology and medical science, an ever-expanding national and global economy, a constantly changing political landscape, and the gradual but persistent progression of basic human, civil, and fundamental rights. This combination of events, 275 years in the making, has ultimately created the hospital system we know today. A careful study of these past legal principles, coupled with a firm grasp of the laws which now govern America’s hospitals and health care system (including the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act), will prepare the lawyers of tomorrow to help shape the future of health care for decades to come. 7 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM NEW COURSES BEING OFFERED - FALL 2013 (continued) INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION PROCEDURE AND PRACTICE: This course studies prevailing procedural models common to international commercial arbitration in light of common law and civil law traditions, the role of institutions, party autonomy and emerging best practices. Students consider both pre-dispute planning and post-dispute strategies for ensuring effective proceedings that will lead to enforceable awards. The course stresses the critically important interplay among counsel, the arbitrators, arbitral institutions and the courts. Students also are introduced to the rudiments of successful advocacy. Priority enrollment will be given to LL.M. students earning a concentration in international commercial arbitration. INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION THEORY AND DOCTRINE: This course is a study of foundational principles, assumptions and debates associated with international commercial arbitration. On a comparative basis, the course examines sources of law and guidance including national legislation, treaties, institutional rules and soft law texts. The course will also explore common precepts of international importance such as party autonomy, the efficacy of international arbitral agreements and awards, the role of the arbitral seat, the severability of the arbitration clause, jurisdictional competence of the arbitral tribunal, and the independence and impartiality of arbitrators. Priority enrollment will be given to LL.M. students earning a concentration in international commercial arbitration. NINTH CIRCUIT APPELLATE ADVOCACY CLINIC: The Ninth Circuit Appellate Advocacy Clinic provides direct representation in prisoner rights (Sec. 1983) appellate cases pending in the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Under the Clinic Director’s supervision, student activities may include studying ethical and practice issues, reviewing court records, interviewing clients, evaluating cases, researching legal issues, developing appellate theories, writing appellate briefs, and arguing appellate cases under special Circuit rules for clinics meeting the Court’s standards. Units of credit are based on 52.5 hours of work per credit. THE GOVERNMENT LAWYER: This course provides real world examples of the unique challenges faced by local, state and federal lawyers practicing in today's governmental offices. Students will be introduced to the history, structure and constitutional and statutory provisions of four representative offices: The Attorney General of the United States, the Attorney General of California, the District Attorney and County Counsel of Los Angeles. Students will explore the ethical rules and responsibilities of the governmental lawyer primarily in the role of civil advocate, but will also explore the issues raised by the lawyer acting as policy maker, and the ethical issues of prosecutorial discretion. Students will review The Model Rules of Professional Conduct of the American Bar Association and state and federal standards directly relevant to government lawyers representing their organizations, and to navigating conflicts of interest inherent in representing simultaneously public entities and the public interest. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the ethics requirement. WINE LAW: This course will introduce students to the development of our nation’s alcoholic beverage laws and the impact of today’s complex federal, state and local regulatory framework on stakeholders at each stage of the product cycle–from grape to glass. Specific topics will include: land use and California winery ordinances; vineyard acquisition, due diligence, development and management; leasing and grape contracts; business models and contractual relationships for wine production and winery operation; licensing and compliance; labeling; appellations of origin; advertising; taxation; tied house regulations; brokerage, distribution, and importation; direct shipment of wine; international regulation and treaties; trademarks; and succession planning in the wine industry. Students will also be exposed to real world application of course topics through instruction from industry participants on the subjects of viticulture, enology, and the mechanics of vineyard operations and production facilities. 8 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM SCHOOL OF LAW CALENDAR 2013 – 2014 Any questions regarding courses should be directed to the Vice Dean's office. Some changes in the course schedule may be required. Classes will be held on all holidays unless noted below. SCHOOL OF LAW FALL 2013 SCHEDULE http://law.pepperdine.edu/academics/calendar/ August 14-15 19 19 21, 22 30 30 30 30 First-year Student Orientation Fall semester classes begin Add/Drop period begins Mandatory Externship Orientation (Attending one of these meetings is required for firsttime externs) Externship Registration Deadline Add/Drop period ends Last day to drop classes without a “W” appearing on transcript Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 100% (No “W” on Transcript) September 2 3 6 13 20 21 Labor Day holiday (no classes) Permission required for add/drop Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 75% (“W” on Transcript) Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 50% (“W” on Transcript) Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 25% (“W” on Transcript) Tuition refund no longer available October 4 University Faculty Conference (No regular classes meet. Please note that Straus intensive classes will still meet on this day) Last day to petition for change in examination schedule 4 November 26 26 27 28-29 Last day of class Last day to elect High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail for semester-length courses. The last day for all other courses is the last day on which the class is held. No classes Thanksgiving holiday (no classes) November/Dec. 11/30-12/3 Study period December 4-17 18 Final Examination Period Winter holiday begins (no classes) WINTER INTENSIVE TERM 2013 -2014 December 30 – January 4 Five-day Winter Intensive Courses-Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution October 14 Registration for Winter Intensive begins December 4 30 31 1 4 Add/Drop period begins Winter Intensive Classes Begin Tuition refund no longer available University holiday (no classes) Last day of Winter Intensive Classes January 9 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM LONDON PROGRAM FALL 2013 SCHEDULE Some changes in the course schedule may be required. Classes will be held on all holidays unless noted below. For detailed information and class schedule and updates for the London fall program, please visit http://law.pepperdine.edu/global-programs/london/ Academic Director: Visiting Professor: Colleen Graffy Thomas Bost August 12 14 18 19 19 19 19 19 22 26 30 Pepperdine London Office opens On Campus Interviews (OCI) start August 8. London students participate via video conferencing after term starts Coach Tour of London Breakfast at 9:30am Orientation Class Photograph 12:00 noon Tour of Neighborhood Start of Fall Classes Opening Dinner Public Holiday UK Add/Drop Deadline September 2 TBA TBA Visit to West London Magistrate’s Court Moot Introduction Class OCI ends October 4 10-11 21-25 Internal Moot Court: Required date for all Moot students Hague Trip Study/Travel Break – No classes November TBA TBA TBA TBA 21 28 Moot against Inner Temple Moot against Middle Temple Royal Courts of Justice Moot Moot against Gray’s Inn Thanksgiving (Classes as usual but festivities begin in the early evening) Last day of classes 2-12 13 Final Exams Program ends, office closes at noon December 10 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM SCHOOL OF LAW SPRING 2014 SCHEDULE http://law.pepperdine.edu/academics/calendar/ January 6 6 8,9 17 17 17 20 20 24 24 31 Spring semester classes begin Add/Drop period begins Mandatory Externship Orientation (Attending one of these meetings is required for first-time externs) Add/Drop period ends Last day to drop classes without a “W” appearing on Transcript Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 100% (No “W” on Transcript) Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday (no classes) Permission required for add/drop Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 75% (“W” on Transcript) Externship Registration Deadline Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 50% (“W” on Transcript) February 7 8 21 Last day to withdraw with tuition refunded at 25% (“W” on Transcript) Tuition refund no longer available Last day to petition for change in examination schedule March 10-14 Study/Interview Break – 2nd & 3rd year students (no classes) Appellate Brief project – 1st year students (no classes) April TBA 23 23 Performance exam – 1st year students Last day of Spring classes Last day to elect High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail for semester-length courses. The last day for all other courses is the last day on which the class is held. April 24 – May 9 May Study and final examination period 16 Graduation TENTATIVE SCHOOL OF LAW SUMMER 2014 SCHEDULE May 19 26 28 Summer session classes begin Memorial Day holiday (no classes) Makeup day for Monday May 26 classes July 3 7-11 Last day of Summer Session Study and final examination period 11 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM FALL 2013 SCHOOL OF LAW FINAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE 12/2 Mon 12/3 Tues 12/4 Wed 12/5 Thurs 12/6 Fri 8:30 am International Tax-Johnson 8:30 am Evidence- Goodman 8:30 am Constitutional Structure Goodman Constitutional Law Individual Rights-McGoldrick Federal Income Tax-Popovich Real Estate TransactionsKublicki Entertainment Law Seminar (Music Industry) – M. Goodman Entertainment Law (Television Industry) -Schneider 1:00 pm Intellectual Property SurveySchwartz 1:00 pm Civil Procedure–Muller Civil Procedure-Ogden Civil Procedure-Taha 1:00 pm Entrepreneurship-Halvorson Wills & Trusts-Knaplund 12/9 Mon 12/10 Tues 12/11 Wed 12/12 Thus 12/13 Fri 8:30 am Criminal ProcedureMcGoldrick 8:30 am Community Property-Popovich 8:30 am Complex Litigation-Muller 8:30 am Hospital Law-Garner 8:30 am Corporations-Taha Community Property-Miller Entertainment LawSchwartz National Security Law-McNeal Employment Law-Schultz Wine Law-Simas Commercial Law Secured Transactions-Scarberry Patent Law-Philpott 1:00 pm Federal Estate & Gift TaxCaron 1:00 pm Real Estate Finance-Nelson Internet Law-Buckley 1:00 pm Torts- Gash Torts-Cochran Torts-Han 1:00 pm Criminal Procedure-McNeal Ethical Lawyering-Ogden 1:00 pm Remedies-Scarberry Employment DiscriminationPaniccia The Government LawyerOrdin Government Regulation of Entertainment & Sports – Delrahim 12/16 Mon 12/17 Tues 8:30 am Federal Income TaxJohnson 8:30 am Evidence-Gash Copyright-McDonald Constitutional Law Individual Rights-James Asylum & Refugee LawEinhorn 1:00 pm Contracts-Helfand Contracts-Chen Contracts-Boliek 1:00 pm RESCHEDULING EXAMS STUDENTS MAY NOT PETITION TO RESCHEDULE A FINAL EXAM UNLESS TWO FINAL EXAMS ARE TO BE TAKEN ON THE SAME DAY PETITIONS TO CHANGE ONE OF TWO EXAMS SCHEDULED FOR THE SAME DAY MUST BE FILED BY THE SEVENTH WEEK OF CLASSES Every effort has been made to avoid conflicts between required courses and in the final exam schedules. As noted above, final exams will not be rescheduled unless a student has two final exams scheduled in the same day. Therefore, it is important for you to pay attention to the final exam schedule when you are selecting your courses. For additional details concerning the law school final exam policies see the Academic Policy Statement (Section 6) at http://law.pepperdine.edu/academics/policy/ 12 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Required Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Day Room Exam Day Exam Time LAW 742.01 CLASS 2790 CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS* JAMES UNITS: 3 8:00am-9:30am WF B 12/17 8:30am LAW 742.02 CLASS 2791 CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS* MCGOLDRICK UNITS: 3 11:00am-12:30pm TTH G 12/5 8:30am LAW 733.01 CLASS 2789 CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE* GOODMAN UNITS: 2 3:20pm-5:20pm T B 12/6 8:30am LAW 803.01 CLASS 2792 CORPORATIONS TAHA UNITS: 3 11:30am-12:30pm MWF D 12/13 8:30am LAW 822.01 CLASS 2793 CRIMINAL PROCEDURE MCNEAL UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm MW D 12/12 1:00pm LAW 822.02 CLASS 2794 CRIMINAL PROCEDURE MCGOLDRICK UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm TTH D 12/9 8:30am LAW 2614.01 CLASS 2795 ETHICAL LAWYERING 1 OGDEN UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm TTH G 12/9 1:00pm LAW 904.01 CLASS 2796 EVIDENCE 2 GASH UNITS: 4 8:00am-9:20am MWF G 12/17 8:30am LAW 904.02 CLASS 2797 EVIDENCE 3 GOODMAN UNITS: 3 11:00am-12:30pm TTH B 12/5 8:30am LAW 814.01 CLASS 2798 FEDERAL INCOME TAX POPOVICH UNITS: 3 3:20pm-4:50pm TTH D 12/6 8:30am LAW 814.02 CLASS 2799 FEDERAL INCOME TAX UNITS: 3 JOHNSON (FORMERLY MCCARDEN) 2:50pm-4:20pm MW B 12/16 8:30am LAW 723.01 CLASS 2800 REMEDIES SCARBERRY UNITS: 3 1:40pm-2:40pm MWF G 12/12 1:00pm LAW 824.01 CLASS 2801 WILLS & TRUSTS KNAPLUND UNITS: 3 10:20am-11:20am MWF D 12/4 1:00pm * Both LAW 733 Constitutional Structure and LAW 742 Constitutional Law Individual Rights are required courses for students who have not taken LAW 744 Constitutional Law, but students may take them in any sequence. They are treated as entirely separate courses. Students who have taken LAW 744 Constitutional Law are not eligible to enroll in LAW 733 or in LAW 742. 1 Satisfies Legal Ethics graduation requirement.Students who have taken LAW 634 Introduction to Ethical Lawyering are not eligible to enroll in LAW 2614. 2 All evidence courses will address the major substantive differences between the Federal Rules of Evidence and the California Evidence Code. The professors have discretion as to whether their evidence course places a heavier emphasis on the Federal Rules or the California Evidence Code and that emphasis will be noted on the course schedule or syllabus. This course will give emphasis to the Federal Rules of Evidence. 3 All evidence courses will address the major substantive differences between the Federal Rules of Evidence and the California Evidence Code. The professors have discretion as to whether their evidence course places a heavier emphasis on the Federal Rules or the California Evidence Code and that emphasis will be noted on the course schedule or syllabus. This course will give emphasis to the California Evidence Code sections. 13 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Day LAW 600.10 CLASS 3255 ACQUISITIONS OF PUBLICLY UNITS: 1 4:30pm-6:30pm MTWTHF SR1 NONE HELD CORPORATIONS STEELE 2:00pm-5:00pm Saturday Library Comp. Lab Enrollment Limit: 24 Special Format: This class will meet on Monday through Friday, November 4 through November 8, and Saturday November 9, 2013. LAW 52.01 CLASS 2802 ADMIN LAW JOURNAL 4 UNITS: 2 (2ND YEAR STUDENTS) TBA TBD TBA OGDEN This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. NONE LAW 53.01 CLASS 2803 ADMIN LAW JOURNAL5 (3RD YEAR STUDENTS) OGDEN UNITS: 1 TBA NONE LAW 2772.01 CLASS 2804 ADV. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: 6 READING THE CONSTITUTION AMAR/PUSHAW ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 20 UNITS: 3 TBD Room TBA Exam Day Exam Time 4:00pm-6:00pm MWTHF(Aug19-23) SR1 NONE 4:00pm-6:00pm T (8/20 & Aug 27) SR3 4:00pm-6:00pm M (8/26 -through Sem) SR1 Special Format: This class will meet Monday, August 19th through Friday, August 23rd. On the second week, it will meet Monday, August 26th and Tuesday, August 27th. After the second week the class will meet every Monday until the end of the semester. LAW 2882.01 CLASS 2805 UNITS: 2 ADV. LITIGATION WRITING 7 SCHULTZ 4:00pm-6:00pm TH A ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. LAW 410.01 CLASS 2806 APPELLATE ADVOCACY UNITS: 2 LEVIN 9:30am-11:30am M ACR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1642.01 CLASS 2807 UNITS: 2 ARBITRATION LAW IN THE SECURITIES INDUSTRY 4:00pm-6:00pm T A UHL ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for 2L Certificate/MDR students Use CLASS 2808 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. NONE 8 NONE 9 NONE 4 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 5 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 6 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. Twenty page paper will be required. Prerequisite: Law 733 Constitutional Structure, Law 742 Constitutional Law – Individual Rights and 7 Permission is needed to enroll in the course by way of submitting to the professor a one-page memorandum explaining why the student wishes to enroll in the course. The deadline to 8 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 9 Note: Students who take Arbitration Law in the Securities Industry are not eligible to receive credit for taking LAW 1672 Arbitration Law. Liberties, or Law 744 Constitutional Law. submit the memorandum is June 15, 2013. Students will be notified shortly thereafter whether they have been enrolled in the course. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 14 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Day Room Exam Day LAW 1632.01 CLASS 2809 ARBITRATION PRACTICE AND UNITS: 2 ADVOCACY 1:40pm-3:40pm T A MILLER ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2810 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 2682.01 CLASS 2811 ASYLUM & REFUGEE LAW EINHORN UNITS: 2 2:50pm-4:50pm W A 12/16 LAW 2000.01 CLASS 2812 BAR EXAM WORKSHOP 10 STURGEON UNITS: 1 4:00pm-6:00pm M ACR NONE LAW 1903.01 CLASS 2813 COMMERCIAL LAW-SECURED UNITS: 3 TRANSACTIONS & COMMERCIAL 11:30am-12:30pm MWF A PAPER SCARBERRY This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 802.01 CLASS 2814 COMMUNITY PROPERTY 11 POPOVICH UNITS: 2 6:15pm-8:15pm W LAW 802.02 CLASS 2815 COMMUNITY PROPERTY 12 MILLER UNITS: 2 9:40am-10:40am LAW 1743.01 CLASS 2816 COMPLEX LITIGATION MULLER ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 18 LAW 912.01 CLASS 2817 COPYRIGHT LAW MCDONALD LAW 1902.01 CLASS 2818 CROSS-CULTURAL CONFLICT AND UNITS: 2 DISPUTE RESOLUTION 1:50pm-3:50 pm T SR1 ROSADILLA ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2819 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1282.01 CLASS 2822 DISPUTE RESOLUTION UNITS: 2 AND RELIGION 4:00pm-6:00pm T SR1 POWNALL ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2823 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. Exam Time NONE 8:30am 12/13 8:30am D 12/10 8:30am TTH G 12/10 8:30am UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm MW SR4 12/11 8:30am UNITS: 2 3:20pm-5:20pm W G 12/16 8:30am 10 Depending on course demand, enrollment may be subject to limitation through an application process. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 11 This course is not a degree requirement but is highly recommended for all persons taking the California bar examination. 12 This course is not a degree requirement but is highly recommended for all persons taking the California Bar Examination. NONE NONE Open to third year law students only. 15 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor LAW 42.01 CLASS 2820 DISPUTE. RESOLUTION.LAW UNITS: 2 TBA TBA JOURNAL 13 (2ND YEAR STUDENTS) TBA WESTON This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. LAW 43.01 CLASS 2821 DISPUTE RESOLUTION LAW JOURNAL 14 (3RD YEAR STUDENTS) WESTON LAW 1932.01 CLASS 2824 DIVORCE AND UNITS: 2 FAMILY MEDIATION 6:00pm-9:30 pm THF G MILLER 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 3, 4, 5 and 17, 18, 19. Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice or concurrent enrollment Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2825 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 1792.01 CLASS 2827 EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW PANICCIA UNITS: 2 8:50am-10:50am TH SR4 12/10 1:00pm LAW 982.01 CLASS 2826 EMPLOYMENT LAW SCHULTZ UNITS: 3 11:30am-12:30pm MWF B 12/13 8:30am LAW 1622.01 CLASS 2828 ENTERTAINMENT LAW 15 SCHWARTZ UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm MW F 12/11 8:30am LAW 942.01 CLASS 2829 ENTERTAINMENT LAW SEMINAR – UNITS: 2 SPECIAL PROBLEMS IN THE MUSIC 3:30pm-5:30pm INDUSTRY M. GOODMAN TH F 12/6 8:30am LAW 2122.01 CLASS 2830 ENTERTAINMENT LAW SEMINAR SPECIAL PROBLEMS IN THE TELEVISION INDUSTRY 16 SCHNEIDER UNITS: 2 6:10pm-8:10pm TH A 12/5 8:30am LAW 2552.01 CLASS 2841 ENTREPRENEURSHIP 17 HALVORSON . ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 88 UNITS: 2 5:30pm-7:30pm W G 12/6 1:00pm 13 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 14 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. Units Time UNITS: 1 TBA Day TBA Room TBA Exam Day Exam Time NONE NONE NONE 15 Students must have taken OR be concurrently enrolled EITHER in LAW 912 Copyright Law OR in LAW 2512 Intellectual Property Survey. 16 Prereqisite or Corequisite: LAW 1622 Entertainment Law. 17 The Entrepreneurship course is a core requirement for the Certificate in Entrepreneurship and Law offered by the Geoffrey H. Palmer Center for Entrepreneurship and the Law. 16 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time LAW 2922.01 CLASS 2853 ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN UNITS: 2 INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION 6:00pm-9:30pm THF F NONE COE/CHILDRESS/ROGERS 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets November 7, 8, 9 and 14, 15, 16. Priority enrollment for LLM students earning the concentration in international commercial arbitration. Use CLASS 2855 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 600.01 CLASS 2862 FAITH, LEADERSHIP AND PRACTICING LAW DEWALT/GOFF UNITS: 2 5:00pm-6:30pm 8:00am-9:00am W TH F F NONE LAW 1842.01 CLASS 2866 FEDERAL ESTATE & GIFT TAXATION CARON UNITS: 3 1:40pm-3:10pm TTH F 12/9 LAW 600.02 CLASS 2873 GLOBAL JUSTICE PRACTICUM 18 GOODNO ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 20 UNITS: 1 3:20pm-4:40pm 9:00am–1:40pm T (8/19–10/8) SAT (10/5) SR2 SR2 NONE LAW 600.03 CLASS 2875 THE GOVERNMENT LAWYER UNITS: 2 ORDIN 8:50am-10:50am TH This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the ethics requirement. SR3 12/10 1:00pm LAW 600.04 CLASS 2879 GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS DELRAHIM A 12/10 1:00pm LAW 71.01 CLASS 2880 HONORS NEGOTIATION UNITS: 2 ADVOCACY 19 5:15pm-9:15pm W SR4 NONE DIMONTE 9:00am-1:00pm SAT TBD Professor Approval Needed ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 8 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement.This class will meet on 11 Wednesdays and three Saturdays. Students advancing to the ABA National Final Negotiation competition will meet approximately 7 sessions of four hours, TBD, in January and February 2014. Priority enrollment for 2L JD/Certificate JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2881 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 403 CLASS 2882 CLASS 2883 CLASS 2884 UNITS: 2 HONORS TRIAL PRACTICE 20 Honors A - CALDWELL 7:00am-9:00am MW TCR Honors B - CALDWELL 9:15am-11:15am MW TCR Honors C - CALDWELL 11:30am-1:30pm MW TCR This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 600.05 CLASS 2885 HOSPITAL LAW GARNER UNITS: 2 8:50am -10:50am UNITS: 2 4:00-6:00pm Day T T 18 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 19 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 20 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. Enrollment with permission of professor only. Prerequisite: LAW 402 Trial Practice. 17 Room F Exam Day Exam Time 1:00pm NONE NONE NONE 12/12 8:30am 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor LAW 1972.01 CLASS 2886 HUMAN RIGHTS UNITS: 3 KMIEC 9:50am-11:20am TTH SR1 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. NONE LAW 2512.01 CLASS 2887 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY SURVEY SCHWARTZ 12/4 LAW 2902.01 CLASS 2888 INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL UNITS: 2 ARBITRATION PROCEDURE & PRACTICE COE 6:00pm-9:30pm THF G NONE ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 10, 11, 12 and October 31, November 1, 2. Priority enrollment for LLM students earning a Concentration in Dispute Resolution. Use CLASS 2889 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 2832.01 CLASS 2890 INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL UNITS: 2 ARBITRATION THEORY 4:00pm-6:00pm M A AND DOCTRINE STIPANOWICH ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for LLM students earning a Concentration in Dispute Resolution. Use CLASS 2891 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 1012.01 CLASS 2892 INTERNATIONAL TAX UNITS: 3 JOHNSON (FORMERLY MCCARDEN) 10:20am-11:20am MWF A Prior completion of LAW 814 Federal Income Taxation is strongly recommended. LAW 2142.01 CLASS 2893 INTERNET LAW BUCKLEY LAW 1712.01 CLASS 2921 INTERVIEWING, COUNSELING AND UNITS: 2 PLANNING 6:00pm-9:30pm THF F NONE GREER 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets September 5, 6, 7 and September 19, 20, 21. Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2926 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 62.01 CLASS 2927 JOURNAL OF BUSINESS, UNITS: 2 ENTREPRENEURSHIP & TBA TBA TBA THE LAW 21 SCARBERRY (2ND YEAR STUDENTS) This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. 21 Units Time UNITS: 3 9:50am-11:20am UNITS: 2 8:50am-10:50am Day MW T Room G F Exam Day Exam Time 1:00pm NONE 12/4 8:30am 12/10 1:00pm NONE Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 18 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Day Room Exam Day LAW 63.01 CLASS 2928 JOURNAL OF BUSINESS, ENTREPRENEURSHIP & THE LAW 22 SCARBERRY (3RD YEAR STUDENTS) UNITS: 1 TBA TBA TBA NONE LAW 2.01 CLASS 2929 LAW REVIEW 23 UNITS: 2 4:00pm-5:00pm TH C (2ND YEAR STUDENTS) PUSHAW/LARSON This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division writing requirement. NONE LAW 3.01 CLASS 2933 LAW REVIEW 24 (3RD YEAR STUDENTS) PUSHAW/LARSON NONE LAW 1300.01 CLASS 3215 LAWYERING PROCESS UNITS: 3 BAKER 9:10am-10:40am T TH SR2 ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 20 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1422.01 CLASS 2937 MEDIATION THEORY UNITS: 2 AND PRACTICE 4:00pm-6:00pm M G ROBINSON ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2939 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1422.02 CLASS 2938 MEDIATION THEORY UNITS: 2 AND PRACTICE 6:15pm-8:15pm T G REISBERG ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2945 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 2892.01 CLASS 3075 NATIONAL SECURITY LAW MCNEAL LAW 1492.01 CLASS 2952 NEGOTIATION THEORY UNITS: 2 AND PRACTICE 1:40pm-3:40pm M A STIPANOWICH ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2955 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. 22 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 23 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 24 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. UNITS: 1 TBA UNITS: 3 4:30pm-6:00pm 19 TBA MW C B Exam Time NONE NONE NONE 12/12 8:30am NONE 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time LAW 1492.02 CLASS 2953 NEGOTIATION THEORY UNITS: 2 AND PRACTICE 4:00pm-6:00pm T G COLEMAN ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2956 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1492.03 CLASS 2954 NEGOTIATION THEORY UNITS: 2 AND PRACTICE 6:00pm-9:30pm THF G NONE WESTON 8:30am-4:30pm SAT ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets September 12, 13, 14 and 26, 27, 28. Use CLASS 2957 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1492.07 CLASS 3966 NEGOTIATION THEORY & PRACTICE UNITS: 2 HILDRETH 6:00pm-9:30 pm THF SR1 NONE ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT SR1 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 3, 4, 5 and 17, 18, 19. Use CLASS 3967 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 1832.01 CLASS 2958 PATENT LAW PHILPOTT LAW 1302.01 CLASS 2960 PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFLICT EDDY UNITS: 2 6:00pm-9:30 pm THF B 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 10, 11,12 and 24, 25, 26. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2963 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. NONE LAW 1302.03 CLASS 3935 PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFLICT REUBEN UNITS: 2 6:00pm-9:30 pm THF F 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 10, 11,12 and 24, 25, 26. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 3936 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. NONE LAW 312.01 CLASS 2965 REAL ESTATE FINANCE NELSON UNITS: 3 8:50am-10:20am TTH B 12/10 1:00pm LAW 1603.01 CLASS 2966 REAL ESTATE TRANSACTONS KUBLICKI UNITS: 2 10:30am-12:30pm TH F 12/5 8:30am UNITS: 2 6:15pm-8:15pm 20 Day T Room F Exam Day Exam Time NONE 12/12 8:30am 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor LAW 2282.01 CLASS 2967 SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: UNITS: 2 APOLOGY, FORGIVENESS AND 1:40pm-3:40pm M SR1 RECONCILIATION ROBINSON ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2973 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 2282.02 CLASS 2968 SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: UNITS: 2 6:00pm-9:30pm THF B EMPLOYMENT DISPUTES 25 PHILBIN/TRAVIS 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 3, 4, 5, and 17, 18, 19. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2974 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 2282.04 CLASS 2972 SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: UNITS: 2 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 6:00pm-9:30pm THF F DISPUTES 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT BURNS Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets October 3, 4, 5 and 17, 18, 19. Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice or concurrent enrollment. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2976 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 2282.03 CLASS 2971 SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: UNITS: 2 MANAGING LITIGATION AND 6:00pm-9:30pm THF F NONE CONFLICT FOR CORPORATIONS 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT AND ORGANIZATIONS GLEASON Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets September 12, 13, 14 and 26, 27, 28. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 2975 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. LAW 2282.09 CLASS 3922 SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: UNITS: 2 MANAGING LITIGATION AND 6:00pm-9:30pm THF B NONE CONFLICT FOR CORPORATIONS 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT AND ORGANIZATIONS ARMSTRONG Special Format: This is a 2-weekend course that meets September 12, 13, 14 and 26, 27, 28. ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 3923 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. 25 Units Time Day Room Exam Day Exam Time NONE NONE NONE Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice or concurrent enrollment. 21 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Upper Division Elective Courses Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Day Room Exam Day LAW 1882.01 CLASS 2969 SPECIAL EDUCATION LAW 26 PETERSON UNITS: 2 3:00pm-5:00pm T SR4 NONE LAW 402.01 CLASS 2977 UNITS: 3 TRIAL PRACTICE 27 CALDWELL 1:30pm-4:30pm TH TCR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 402.02 CLASS 2978 TRIAL PRACTICE 28 UNITS: 3 CHASE 1:40pm-4:40pm T TCR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 402.03 CLASS 2979 TRIAL PRACTICE 29 UNITS: 3 CRON 6:10pm-9:10pm W TCR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 402.04 CLASS 2980 UNITS: 3 TRIAL PRACTICE 30 MCCOY 6:10pm-9:10pm M TCR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 402.05 CLASS 2981 UNITS: 3 TRIAL PRACTICE 31 MIRA 6:00pm-9:00pm T TCR ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 16 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement NONE LAW 1172.01 CLASS 2982 TRIAL PREP. & SET. (CIV) 32 UNITS: 2 BARBA 6:10pm-8:10pm M SR1 ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 1171.01 CLASS 2983 TRIAL PREP. & SET. (CRIM) 33 UNITS: 2 GORIN 6:10pm-8:10pm T A ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 24 This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 600.07 CLASS 2984 WINE LAW SIMAS 26 UNITS: 2 6:15pm-8:15pm M F 12/12 Exam Time 8:30am Students interested in enrolling in the Special Education Advocacy Clinic during the 2013-2014 academic year must enroll in this class if they have not previously completed this class. It will not be offered in the Spring semester. 27 Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Practice. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 28 Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Practice. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 29 Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Practice. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 30 Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Practice. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 31 Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Practice. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 32 Prerequisite: Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Preparation and Settlement. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 33 Prerequisite: LAW 822 Criminal Procedure. Only students who have taken or are currently enrolled in LAW 904 Evidence, may take Trial Preparation and Settlement. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 22 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM First Year Section A Class Schedule Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time LAW 754.01 CIVIL PROCEDURE TAHA UNITS: 4 8:50am-10:10am Day Room Exam Day Exam Time M*WF C 12/5 1:00pm * This class will end at 10:25 a.m. on Mondays to allow for administrative updates. LAW 614.01 LAW 654.01 CONTRACTS CHEN UNITS: 4 11:10am-12:30pm TWF ACR 12/16 1:00pm TORTS GASH UNITS: 4 1:40pm-3:00pm MTTH C 12/11 1:00pm 23 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM First Year Section B Class Schedule Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time LAW 754.02 CIVIL PROCEDURE MULLER LAW 614.02 LAW 654.02 Day Room Exam Day Exam Time UNITS: 4 8:50am-10:10am MWF D 12/5 1:00pm CONTRACTS BOLIEK UNITS: 4 11:10am-12:30pm TWF C 12/16 1:00pm TORTS COCHRAN UNITS: 4 1:40pm-3:00pm M*TTH ACR 12/11 1:00pm * This class will end at 3:15 p.m. on Mondays to allow for administrative updates. 24 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM First Year Section C Class Schedule Fall 2013 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time LAW 754.03 CIVIL PROCEDURE OGDEN UNITS: 4 8:50am-10:10am Day Room Exam Day Exam Time M*WF E 12/5 1:00pm * This class will end at 10:25 a.m. on Mondays to allow for administrative updates. LAW 614.03 LAW 654.03 CONTRACTS HELFAND UNITS: 4 11:10am-12:30pm TWF E 12/16 1:00pm TORTS HAN UNITS: 4 1:40pm-3:00pm MTTH E 12/11 1:00pm 25 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM First Year Legal Research and Writing Groups Fall 2013 LAW 181.01 LAW 181.02 LAW 181.03 LAW 181.04 LEGAL RESEARCH AND WRITING I (Units/Time) CHING UNITS: 2 (Day) (Room) GROUP 1 9:10am-10:10am T D Subsection 1-1 Subsection 1-2 Subsection 1-3 9:10am-10:10am 10:20am-11:20am 11:30am-12:30pm TH TH TH C C C LEGAL RESEARCH AND WRITING I REED UNITS: 2 GROUP 2 9:10am-10:10am T C Subsection 2-1 Subsection 2-2 Subsection 2-3 9:10am-10:10am 10:20am-11:20am 11:30am-12:30pm TH TH TH A A A LEGAL RESEARCH AND WRITING I BUTLER UNITS: 2 GROUP 3 9:10am-10:10am T E Subsection 3-1 Subsection 3-2 Subsection 3-3 9:10am-10:10am 10:20am-11:20am 11:30am-12:30pm TH TH TH E E E LEGAL RESEARCH AND WRITING I LEVIN UNITS: 2 GROUP 4 9:10am-10:10am T ACR Subsection 4-1 Subsection 4-2 Subsection 4-3 9:10am-10:10am 10:20am-11:20am 11:30am-12:30pm TH TH TH ACR ACR ACR 26 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Winter Intensive Courses 2013 – 2014 ADVANCE ASSIGNMENTS FOR INTENSIVE COURSES A class syllabus including any advance reading and/or writing assignments for intensive classes will be emailed to students 3-4 weeks prior to the start of class. Please note that it is each student’s responsibility to review the syllabus well before the class begins and complete any advance assignments. Please expect to receive the syllabus the first week in December. Students who show up the first day of class unprepared risk being dropped from the class. Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution - Winter Intensive Classes One Week Intensive Courses – December 30 and 31, 2013 and January 2, 3 and 4, 2014 The following classes will meet from 8:30am to 5:30pm on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and from 8:30am to 11:30 am on Saturday (Classes will not be held on January 1, 2014) Enrollment Limit: 24 Course Number Course Title Instructor Units Time Room Exam Day LAW 1492.W1 NEGOTIATION THEORY AND PRACTICE UNITS: 2 G CLASS 2512 KIM This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 1422.W1 MEDIATION THEORY AND PRACTICE UNITS: 2 SR1 CLASS 2513 CRAVEN This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. NONE LAW 1302.W1 PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFLICT CLASS 2514 REUBEN NONE UNITS: 2 ACR LAW 1902.W1 CROSS-CULTURAL CONFLICT AND UNITS: 2 F CLASS 2515 DISPUTE RESOLUTION MEIERDING This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. Exam Time NONE LAW 1932.W1 DIVORCE AND FAMILY MEDIATION UNITS: 2 A NONE CLASS 2516 ZUMETA Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice or Alternative Dispute Resolution. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 2282.W1 SELECTED ISSUES IN DISPUTE UNITS: 2 SR4 CLASS 2658 RESOLUTION: OMBUDS TALBOT Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice or Alternative Dispute Resolution NONE Additional information including Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution faculty bios is available at: http://law.pepperdine.edu/straus/academics/winter/courses-faculty.htm 27 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM FALL 2013 Clinical Law Courses NOTES If you think you are interested in participating in an externship during the Fall 2013 term, please contact Jeff Baker, Director of Clinical Education at jeff.baker@pepperdine.edu, or Donna Brabec, Temporary Clinical Programs Administrator at clinicallaw@pepperdine.edu. The externship registration deadline is August 30, 2013, unless otherwise approved by the Director of Clinical Education. If you have a pending or secured externship, you must attend one of the mandatory orientation meetings. The mandatory orientation meetings are on August 21, 2013 and August 22, 2013. Please also note: • Each externship fieldwork course includes a mandatory workshop that meets bi-weekly. • All workshops will begin meeting the second week of the term. • Work at for-profit law firms does not qualify for externship credit, unless it is pro bono work in the public interest approved by the Director of Clinical Education. • Externship students must enroll in both fieldwork and a workshop through the Clinical Programs Office in room 381. • All externships must be approved in advance by the Director of Clinical Education. Students must register with the Clinical Programs Office by August 30, 2013. • In-house Legal Aid, Asylum, and Special Education clinical students may enroll via Wavenet. • All externships are graded on a High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail system. • All clinical courses are graded on a High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail system. • The last day to drop a course or reduce units is September 13, 2013. 28 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Clinical Law Courses Fall 2013 Course Number LAW 355.01 Course Title Units Day Room Exam Instructor Time CLINICAL LAW-ENTERTAINMENT Maximum 4 fieldwork units NONE EXTERNSHIP 34 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the externship, students are required to enroll in the workshop session listed below. LAW 600.13 Entertainment 5:00pm-6:00pm TH (LaTerza) SR3 Externship Workshop Alternate weeks–Commencing on 8/29/2013 LAW 365.01 CLINICAL LAW-GOVERNMENT Maximum 10 fieldwork units NONE EXTERNSHIP 35 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the externship, students are required to enroll in the workshop session listed below. LAW 600.14 Government Externship 7:00pm-8:00pm W (Baker) SR3 Workshop Alternate weeks–Commencing on 8/28/2013 LAW 315.01 CLINICAL LAW-JUDICIAL Maximum 10 fieldwork units NONE EXTERNSHIP 36 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the externship, students are required to enroll in the workshop session listed below. LAW 600.15 Judicial Externship 5:00pm-6:00pm W (Schnegg) SR2 Workshop Alternate weeks–Commencing on 8/28/2013 LAW 345.01 CLASS CLINICAL LAW-PUBLIC INTEREST Maximum 10 fieldwork units NONE EXTERNSHIP 37 ENROLLMENT LIMIT: TBD Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the externship, students are required to enroll in the workshop session listed below. LAW 600.16 Public Interest Externship 4:00pm-5:00pm TH (Baker) SR3 Workshops Alternate weeks–Commencing on 8/29/2012 34 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 35 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 36 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 37 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 29 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Clinical Law Courses Fall 2013 Course Number LAW 385 Course Title Units Day Room Exam Instructor Time LEGAL AID CLINIC 38 UNITS: 2 - 4 STRINGFELLOW-OTEY 2:50pm-4:50pm M SR3 NONE ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 8 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked, and are encouraged to earn 3 or 4 credits in the clinic. In addition to the clinic course, students are required to commit to a schedule of weekly field work at the Union Rescue Mission to be determined with Prof. Stringfellow-Otey. Please email Professor Stringfellow-Otey at Brittany.Stringfellow@pepperdine.edu with any questions. LAW 385.01 CLASS 3060 2 UNITS LAW 385.02 CLASS 3061 3 UNITS LAW 385.03 CLASS 3062 4 UNITS This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 340 SPECIAL EDUCATION ADVOCACY UNITS: 2 -4 CLINIC 39 PETERSON 6:00pm-8:00pm T 379 NONE ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 8 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the regular class time, students are expected to work at least 4 hours per week in clinical practice or case rounds, on a schedule to be designed by students and the professor. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upperdivision skills requirement. Students may enroll via Wavenet for 2 – 4 units using class numbers below. LAW 340.01 CLASS 3067 2 UNITS LAW 340.02 CLASS 3068 3 UNITS LAW 340.03 CLASS 3069 4 UNITS LAW 600.08 CLASS NINTH CIRCUIT APPELLATE UNITS: 2 6:00pm-8:00pm TH 379 NONE ADVOCACY CLINIC 40 ROSEN ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 4 Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. In addition to the clinic course, students are required to register for four hours of fieldwork per week. Please work with Professor Rosen to schedule fieldwork hours. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. 38 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 39 Check with the Special Education Advocacy Clinic Director for the date and time of orientation. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 40 Enrollment with permission of professor only. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 30 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM Clinical Law Courses-Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution Fall 2013 Course Number LAW 320.01 CLASS 3025 Course Title Units Day Room Exam Instructor Time ASYLUM CLINIC 41 UNITS: 2 EINHORN 6:30pm-8:30pm W 379 NONE ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 8 Students meet in the class and are also required to register for four (4) hours of fieldwork per week. Students receive one unit of credit for every 52.5 hours worked. Students must enroll in one of the fieldwork sessions below. Enrollment is limited for each fieldwork session to 8 students. Effort will be made to accommodate student scheduling preferences, although they cannot be guaranteed. LAW 320.02 CLASS 3026 9:00am-1:00pm TH (enrollment limit 4) LAW 320.03 CLASS 3031 9:00am-1:00pm F (enrollment limit 4) This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. LAW 600.09 CLASS 3210 EMPLOYMENT LAW MEDIATION CLINIC 42: UNITS: 2 CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FAIR 1:00pm-3:00pm TH DFEH* NONE EMPLOYMENT AND HOUSING 6:00pm-9:30 pm THF G (8/23 F) FRANKFURT 8:30am- 4:30pm SAT G ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 5 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Special Format: This class will meet on one weekend, August 22, 23, 24, and also every other week on Thursdays for two hours.*Please note that the Thursday afternoon class from time 1:00-3:00 pm that will meet every other week at the DFEH office. This class requires a special application. Anyone interested in participating should speak with Professor Stephanie Bell in the Straus office. LAW 380.01 CLASS 3080 UNITS: 2 MEDIATION CLINIC 43 BELL/FACTOR/WILLIAMS 6:15pm-8:15pm T B NONE Prerequisite: Mediation Theory and Practice ENROLLMENT LIMIT: 30 Priority enrollment for JD/Certificate and JD/MDR students. Use CLASS 3081 to place yourself on the waitlist if not eligible for priority enrollment. This course provides an opportunity to fulfill the upper-division skills requirement. The Mediation Clinic offers students the opportunity to mediate actual disputes. The Mediation Clinic will require 2 hours of class time weekly (scheduled) and approximately 8 hours of fieldwork per week. Students are advised to leave two time blocks (2 mornings, 2 afternoons or 1 of each) in their schedule to accommodate mediations at various courthouses throughout Los Angeles County. 41 Prerequisite: LAW 2682 Asylum & Refugee Law or concurrent enrollment. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 42 Pre-requisite: Law 380 Mediation Clinic. Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 43 Graded as High Pass/Pass/Credit/Fail. 31 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM COURSE CHANGES – REFLECTED WITHIN THE FALL 2013 CLASS SCHEDULE LAW Course Title Instructor Course # WI WINTER INTENSIVE CLASSES DEC 30, 2013-JAN 4, 2014 As of Brief Description of Course Change 12/3/13 CLASSROOMS ASSIGNED FOR FOR STRAUS COURSES 12/3/13 2 SOL COURSES CANCELED 10/2/13 ADDED CLASS NUMBERS TO USE FOR REGISITRATION AND NOTES FOR COURSES THAT MEET UPPER-DIV. SKILLS REQUIREMENT 1642.01 ARBITRATION LAW IN THE SECURITIES INDUSTRY UHL 8/7/13 CLASSROOM 2000.01 BAR EXAM WORKSHOP STURGEON 7/29/13 CLASSROOM 600.W1 BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT FOR LAWYERS KOLLAR (WINTER INTENSIVE) 12/3/13 COURSE CANCELED 5/30/13 COURSE # CHANGED 315.01 CLINICAL LAW-JUDICIAL EXTERNSHIP SCHNEGG 7/30/13 PROFESSOR 600.15 JUDICIAL EXTERNSHIP WORKSHOP SCHNEGG 8/27/13 CLASSROOM 1903.01 COMMERCIAL LAW-SECURED TRANSACTIONS & COMMERCIAL PAPER SCARBERRY 6/17/13 FULFILLS UPPER- DIVISION SKILLS REQUIREMENT 1122.W1 COMMUNICATION & CONFLICT (WINTER INTENSIVE) TBD 5/29/13 COURSE DELETED 742.01 CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-IND. RIGHTS JAMES 6/3/13 DAYS/TIME/CLASSROOM 742.02 CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-IND. RIGHTS MCGOLDRICK 6/14/13 CLASSROOM 803.01 CORPORATIONS TAHA 6/27/13 CLASSROOM 1902.01 CROSS-CULTURAL CONFLICT & DISPUTE RESOLUTION ROSADILLA 8/21/13 CLASSROOM AND TIME 10/3/13 FULFILLS UPPER-DIVISION SKILLS REQUIREMENT 1902.W1 CROSS-CULTURAL CONFLICT & DISPUTE RESOLUTION 10/3/13 FULFILLS UPPER-DIVISION SKILLS REQUIREMENT 600.09 EMPLOYMENT LAW MEDIATION CLINIC: FRANKFURT CALIF. DEPARTMENT OF FAIR EMPLOYMENT AND HOUSING 5/29/13 NEW COURSE ADDED 6/7/13 PROF., DATES, TIME 2552.01 ENTREPRENEURSHIP HALVORSON 7/29/13 PROFESSOR 8/14/13 FINAL EXAM DATE & TIME 2922.01 ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION COE/CHILDRESS/ 10/2/13 PROFESSORS & ROGERS PRIORITY ENROLLMENT FOR LLM CONCENTRATION IN INT’L COMMERCIAL ARB. 32 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM COURSE CHANGES – REFLECTED WITHIN THE FALL 2013 CLASS SCHEDULE (Continued) LAW Course Title Course # 600.01 FAITH, LEADERSHIP & PRACTICING LAW Instructor As of DEWALT/GOFF Brief Description of Course Change 6/27/13 CLASSROOM 600.02 GLOBAL JUSTICE PRACTICUM GOODNO 8/22/13 CLASSROOM 600.04 GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS DELRAHIM 8/16/13 CLASSROOM 600.05 HOSPITAL LAW GARNER 8/22/13 CLASSROOM 71.01 HONORS NEGOTIATION ADVOCACY DIVISION DIMONTE 8/225/13 MEETS UPPER SKILLS REQUIREMENT 2512.01 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY SURVEY SCHWARTZ 7/1/2013 CLASSROOM 2902.01 INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION PROCEDURE & PRACTICE COE 10/2/13 PROFESSOR 1712.01 INTERVIEWING, COUNSELING, PLANNING GREER 5/20/13 REVISED DATES 6/10/13 PRIORITY ENROLLMENT NOTES 1301.W1 LAW OFFICE MANAGEMENT SELBAK 2.01 LAW REVIEW MULLER 9/6/13 CLASSROOM PUSHAW/LARSON 9/26/13 PROFESSOR 3.01 LAW REVIEW PUSHAW/LARSON 9/26/13 PROFESSOR 1300.01 LAWYERING PROCESS BAKER 385.01 LEGAL AID CLINIC STRINGFELLOW- 7/31/13 ENROLL IN CLASS BASED OTEY ON NUMBER OF UNITS 380.01 MEDIATION CLINIC BELL 5/30/13 REVISED NOTES 1422.W1 MEDIATION THEORY AND PRACTICE CRAVEN 10/1/13 PROFESSOR 1492.03 NEGOTIATION THEORY AND PRACTICE WESTON 6/4/13 DATES, TIMES, ROOM 1492.07 NEGOTIATION THEORY AND PRACTICE HILDRETH 8/2/13 ADDITIONAL CLASS ADDED SPECIAL FORMAT-OCTOBER 8/5/13 CLASSROOM 600.08 NINTH CIRCUIT APPELLATE ADV. CLINIC ROSEN 5/29/13 DAY AND TIME 1302.02 PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFILCT BELL 5/30/13 COURSE DELETED 1302.03 PSYCHOLOGY OF CONFLICT REUBEN 7/16/13 ADDED AN ADDITIONAL COURSE 33 12/3/13 COURSE CANCELED 10/2/13 COURSE NAME; NUMBER, AND CLASS NUMBER (WINTER INTENSIVE) 5/29/13 COURSE ADDED 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM COURSE CHANGES – REFLECTED WITHIN THE FALL 2013 CLASS SCHEDULE (Continued) LAW Course Title Course # 603.01 REAL ESTATE TRANSACTONS 2282.09 340 Instructor As of Brief Description of Course Change 6/27/13 CLASSROOM KUBLICKI SELECTED ISSUES IN D.R.: MANAGING ARMSTRONG LITIGATION & CONFLICT FOR CORPORATIONS AND ORGANIZATIONS SPECIAL EDUCATION ADVOCACY CLINIC PETERSON 7/16/13 ADDED AN ADDITIONAL COURSE 7/15/13 REMOVED PRE-REQUISITE/ STUDENTS ENROLL IN CLASS BASED ON NUMBER OF UNITS 2282.W1 SELECTED ISSUES IN DISPUTE RESOLUTION: OMBUDS TALBOT 10/1/13 ADDED COURSE-(STRAUS WINTER INTENSIVE) 600.03 THE GOVERNMENT LAWYER ORDIN 8/2/13 COURSE MEETS ETHICS REQUIREMENT 600.06 THE RULE OF LAW AND THE AMERICAN JUDICIARY TACHA/LINDEN 6/17/13 COURSE DELETED 1171.01 TRIAL PREP. & SET. (CRIM) GORIN 8/8/13 PROFESSOR 34 12/3/2013 10:01:56 AM