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Mr Essay Research Paper PROSPECTUS OF HONOURS (стр. 2 из 4)

Pre-requisite course

Delict (? course)

Textbook

Fleming: Law of Torts {9th ed.)

Assessment

Essay (1/3); Exam (2/3)

Preliminary Reading

P.S. Atiyah: The Damages Lottery

Course Organiser

Dr. D. Brodie

Members of staff teaching on the course

Dr. D. Brodie and Mr. M. Hogg

EC SUBSTANTIVE LAW

The aim of this course is to develop knowledge and understanding of the legal issues arising from the concept of the single internal market of the European Community and related policy issues.

The Autumn term is concerned essentially with economic activity: the Community as an actor in international trade, the internal movement of goods, monetary movements and the development of EMU. The Spring term is concerned more with the human element of the single market, in areas such as freedom to provide services, free movement of the employed and the self-employed, recognition of qualifications, citizenship and gender discrimination. The course will also look briefly at the CAP as an example of sectoral policy.

Prerequisite

A pass in European Community Law (Ordinary)

Suggested Reading

Green, Hartley and Usher: The Legal Foundations of the Single European Market (OUP 1991) ?

now rather out-of-date, but useful background

Weatherill and Beaumont: EC Law (3rd ed. 1999)

Craig and De Burca: EU Law ? Text, Cases and Materials (2nd ed. 1998)

Assessment

One essay (30% of grade); one written examination (70% of grade).

Course Organiser

Professor J.A. Usher

Staff Teaching the course

Professor J. Usher, Dr. N. Nic Shuibhne and Dr. R. Lane

EUROPEAN COMMUNITY REGULATION OF CULTURE AND THE MASS MEDIA

This course will explore European Community law?s impact on the cultural life of the Member States. Itaims to develop an understanding of: (a) the legal basis for European Community involvement in thecultural domain, focussing, in particular, on the impact of the Treaty articles relating to the Internal Market and competition on key cultural activities suchas sport and television broadcasting; (b) the various regulatory options, ranging from harmonisation to financial assistance, open to the European Community when intervening in the cultural field; and (c) therespective roles of the Member States, the European Community and other international organisations such as the Council of Europe when addressing cultural issues. The course examines whether the application of European Community law has led to greater cultural diversity within the Member States as well as whether it is encouraging the development of a new and distinct sense of European identity. Special attention will be given to initiatives in education and to European citizenship.

Prerequisite Courses

A pass in European Community Law (Ordinary) or a comparable course in European Community law.

Assessment

One essay (30% of total); one written examination (70% of total).

Course Organiser

Dr. R. Craufurd Smith

EUROPEAN INSTITUTIONS

The consititutions and methods of operation of contemporary European institutions, particularly the European Union. The principles and operation of the Treaty of Rome; the Single European Act; the Treaty on European Union. The pillar structure of the Treaty on European Union; the European Communities pillar; Common Foreign and Security Policy; Justice and Home Affairs. The theory and practice of European political, economic and legal integration The policies of the European Union. The European Union in the global context. The role of the institutions of the European Union; the European Commission; the Council of the European Union; the European Parliament; the European Court of Justice.

The course will throughout be concerned with examining the progress towards economic and political integration in Europe. Current topics will be considered, inter alia, enlargement, montery union, Treaty reform. The course is explicitly inter-disciplinary in nature.

Books

Dinan, D.: An Ever Closer Union (MacMillan, 1995)

Lodge, J.: The European Community and the Challenge of the Future (3rd Edition, Pinter)

Assessment

One essay (30% of total); written examination (70% of total)

Course Organiser/Teacher

Mr. A. Scott

FAMILY LAW

This course covers the law relating to ?family relationships?, in the broadest sense, and the resulting effects on individuals inter se and in society. In the first term, the law relating to husband and wife and to cohabitation will be considered. In the second term, the law relating to the child within the family and state intervention in respect of children will be considered. For each meeting of the class, students are expected to read the prescribed materials (often quite substantial) – books, articles, statutes, cases and law reform reports. This preparation will provide the background for a discussion of the selected topic. This course should be avoided by students who are not willing both to prepare the materials and to participate in discussion.

Pre-requisite course

Family Law (? course)

Assessment

10,000 Essay (50%), Unseen Examination (50%)

Student Selection

General academic merit with a preference for students who have a merit in Family Law (Ordinary)

Preliminary reading

Donzelot, The Policy of Families

Glendon, The New Family and the New Property

Gittnes, The Family in Question

Course Organiser/Teacher

Dr. A. Griffiths

FRENCH LAW

French Law provides students with an understanding of the logic of French law, a working knowledge of its sources and an ability to provide solutions to practical cases.

The course is divided into two parts

· A general introduction: history of civil law, sources of the law, court systems (judicial and administrative) and the legal profession

· An application of French Law (law of persons, right to privacy, succession, obligation etc. and any

topics which the class has a particular interest in).

Seminars

There will be one two-hour seminar each week

Assessment

By means of an essay (counting for 1/3) and a three hour written examination (counting for 2/3).

Student Selection

General academic merit. Knowledge of French is not essential but some French would be beneficial.

Preliminary reading

Bell (J), Boyron (S), Whittaker (S), Principles of French Law (1998)

Course Organiser/Teacher

Ma?tre J. Godard.

GENDER AND JUSTICE

The main aim of the course is to examine crime, the criminal law and the practice of the criminal justice system in relation to gender.

The first term examines differential patterns of criminal involvement between men and women and assesses explanations for these patterns. It also provides an overview of the operation of the criminal justice system as it relates to gender.

The second term provides a more detailed examination of specific types of crime such as homicide, incest and child sexual abuse. (This will include consideration of: patterns of victimisation; characteristics of perpetrators and explanations for their behaviours; and the nature and effectiveness of specialist programmes which have been developed to deal with perpetrators). It also examines the social and political processed underpinning the sanctioning of behaviours. Particular topics will include: prostitution; homosexuality; pornography and obscenity.

Preliminary Reading

A. Morris, Women, Crime and Criminal Justice

F. Heidensohn, Women and Crime

C. Smart, Feminism and the Power of Law

Assessment

By a three hour unseen examination (75%) and a course essay (25%). Oral examinations will be used on a selective basis. Non-law students taking the course as a one term module will be assessed by means of a course essay (see below).

Student Selection

Admission to the course will depend upon past academic record. Students who are not registered for an LL.B. may study the course for the first term only but preference will be given to those candidates who wish to study the course for two terms; students will not be allowed to join the course in the second term

Course Organiser/Teacher

Mrs. L. McAra

GERMAN PRIVATE AND COMMERCIAL LAW

The course aims to give students a basic understanding of German private law and to enable them to carry out independent research in German law to the extent necessary for problems in international private law or cross-border commercial negotiations. Knowledge of German is not a prerequisite. The course will cover: Introduction to the German Legal system in a European and comparative context. History of German law. Studying law in Germany and the legal profession. Basic notions of property law, contract and delict. Partnerships and Companies. Credit security and insolvency; corporate governance. Labour law.

Pre-requisite Courses

Property Law and Contract

Preliminary Reading

Nigel Foster: German Legal Systems and Laws, chap. 1

Assessment

By 5000 word essay (1/3) and written exam (2/3)

Quota

This course has a quota of 15 Law students and 10 non-Law students – Total 25.

Course Organiser

Mr. B. Sch?fer

Members of staff teaching on the course

Mr. B. Sch?fer and Professor G. Gretton

HISTORY OF SCOTS LAW

The aim in the first term of this course is to introduce the student to the techniques of historical scholarship and to consider in outline the development of Scots law until the 16th century. In the second term it is possible to study some areas of legal history in greater depth. Topics considered in the past have included Celtic law, legal writers, and areas of substantive law such as the constitution and dissolution of marriage, landownership, succession and homicide.

Students are encouraged to study law in its wider social context and, wherever possible, to make use of primary source material. A number of formal lecture-type sessions are unavoidable, but the preferred teaching method is by way of informed group discussion.

Assessment

The method of assessment is by unseen examination and one class essay of about 5,000 words. Essay topics are agreed at the end of the first term for submission at the start of the third term.

Preliminary reading

There is no set preliminary reading but a list of useful background material is available from Mr. Sellar. Although some acquaintance with the general course of Scottish history is an advantage it is not essential.

Course Organiser/Teacher

Dr. J.W. Cairns

HUMAN RIGHTS

This course begins with the conceptual analysis of human rights and proceeds to a consideration of important case studies in international human rights law (a background knowledge of public international law would be an advantage in this regard). In the second half of the course, the principal focus is on the European Convention on Human Rights and (to a lesser extent) protection of rights in the European Union and by other European instruments.

Assessment

By essay (33%) and written examination (67%), with oral examinations only as deemed necessary by the examiners.

Course Organiser

Mr. S. Tierney

Members of staff teaching the course

Mr. S. Tierney and Mr. W. Finnie

Preliminary Reading

While preliminary reading is not essential, students might consult, for example:

F.G. Jacobs & R.C.A. White, The European Convention on Human Rights (2nd ed., 1996)

Selection criterion

Academic merit as evinced by all earlier results in the degree course, including third year results when applicable (but with no preference as between third and fourth year students). Performance in other courses will be given extra weight only if necessary as a tie-breaker.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LAW

This course has two parts. The first part is concerned with the substantive legal issues associated with software, hardware, the computer industry and in particular the Internet. Particular topics of current interest will be selected for in depth analysis, drawn from areas such as e-commerce; computers and intellectual property rights (e.g. copyright on the Web); electronic contracting and terms in software contracts; free speech on the Internet; crime on the Internet; and privacy rights in relation to electronic information. The need for a ?law of cyberspace? will be considered. The second part of the course deals with how computer technology can assist lawyers and judges in advising and deciding on solutions to legal issues. Students will emerge with both theoretical knowledge about AI and law, and the practical ability to build a legal knowledge based expert system. A small expert system built mainly during four class hours in a specified legal domain will be assessed as course work. Students will critically examine whether computer programmes can successfully model legal reasoning strategies such as deduction and analogy.

Teaching

Weekly 2 hour seminars

Assessment

Examination 60%

Students can choose either to write a 6,000 word essay to build an expert system in an approved legal domain with notes on the implementation methodology not exceeding 6,000 words. In either case this element is worth 40% of assessment.

Pre-requisites

Sudents taking this course must have a pass in Commercial Law Ordinary and Contract Law Ordinary. An interest in technology/artificial intelligence is desirable but no knowledge of computer programming is required.

Preliminary Reading

Edwards and Waelde (eds.), Law and the Internet: Regulating Cyberspace (Hart Publishing 1997)

Law and the Internet: A Framework for Electronic Commerce (Hart Publishing 2000)

Zeleznikow and Hunter, Building Intelligent Legal Information Systems (Kluwer, 1994)

Course Organiser

Ms. L. Edwards

Members of staff teaching the course

Ms. L. Edwards, Ms. C. Waelde and other members of the Law Faculty.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

Intellectual Property is the generic term for patents, copyright, trade marks, design rights and various other branches of law such as breach of confidence and passing off. The subjects has always been one of intrinsic interest, and its commercial significance has grown greatly in the last 20 years. The course will focus on UK law, but will also deal with international and EC aspects. Emphasis is given to current issues, including copyright in computer programs and databases, biotechnology patents, and the scope of design protection.

Seminars

Weekly 2 hour seminars ? Fridays 11 a.m. ? 1 p.m.

Assessment

Examination 60% and Essay 40% (7,500 words)

Preliminary Reading

Phillips & Firth, Introduction to Intellectual Property, (4th edition 1999/2000)

Course Organiser

Dr. G. T. Laurie

Members of staff teaching on the course

Dr. G. T. Laurie, Mrs. C. Waelde and Professor H. MacQueen

INTERNATIONAL LAW A: The Individual and International Law

The course will cover various topics relating to the role of individuals (including companies) in the international legal system. The principal topics will be such subjects as: diplomatic protection of nationals abroad; international human rights law; expropriation of property; state immunity; the foreign act of state doctrine; extradition; international criminal law (including such subjects as war crimes, piracy, hijacking, torture and terrorism); and international cooperation in the administration of justice.

Assessment

One essay ( to be submitted in the second or third term), plus a written examination.

Student Selection

No particular bias in favour of fourth year students, but a student who has performed well in one of the other honours courses in the area of international law in his or her third year will be regarded favourably.

Course Organiser

Dr. S. Neff

Members of staff teaching the course

Dr. S. Neff , Professor W. Gilmore and Ms. S. Stirling

JURISPRUDENCE OF LEGAL CONCEPTS

Aims

To encourage students to develop a clear picture of the overall conceptual framework within which legal activities and legal thoughts operate. To develop a critical approach to the values which inhere in legal institutions.

Decription

The course will discuss the conceptual framework of contemporary systems of private and public law, including general theories of rights, duties and powers. In this context certain main institutions of law will be considered such as property, ownership and possession; contract and promising; legal personality, delict, negligence and risk; responsibility and punishment, evidence and procedure; citizenship; rights and right creation. In each case there will be consideration of the extent to which particular legal or social values are presupposed by or flow from particular institutions.

Method of Assessment

Written examination (75%) and essay (25%)

Selection of Students

This course is compulsory for certain Joint Honours students who have not taken Ordinary Jurisprudence. They have first claim on places. Thereafter general academic merit. The quota is 25 students.

Course Organiser

Mr. B. Sch?fer

JUSTICE, ETHICS AND LAW

The course is concerned with theories and problems of justice, the right and the good in relation to law. The course will focus on the nature of moral values and their relevance to law (whether providing an intrinsic element of law, or a critical standard for its appraisal); theories of justice with special reference to legal problems; ethics and the legal process.