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2000-2001 General Catalog
University of California, Riverside
LAW AND SOCIETY
Subject abbreviation: LWSO Steven E. Clark, Ph.D., Chair
Law stands at the heart of a free society, channeling behavior and ensuring areas of free human choice. All of us are aware, at least vaguely, of the importance of law in our daily lives. We speak of rights and duties, freedom and order, justice and injustice. The importance of law as a concept is reflected in the number of disciplines in the University which study and teach law and law-like relationships, disciplines ranging throughout the Humanities and Social Sciences.
The Law and Society major offers undergraduates an interdisciplinary liberal arts approach to the study of legal and law-like relationships and institutions. The program combines the perspectives of various disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The multidisciplinary approach serves several purposes. It introduces students to a wider range of views about law than is generally possible within a single department. It provides a coherent and rigorous program of courses organized around the theme of law and law-like relationships. It provides a way of developing critical and analytical thinking on the part of students concerning various ideas associated with law and social institutions.
The Law and Society curriculum should be of educational benefit to students who do not plan to pursue graduate studies as well as to those who plan to take graduate work following their bachelor degree studies. For the former, this program offers one means of understanding some complex relationships between social institutions. For the latter, the breadth of course work in Law and Society should provide a sound basis for graduate studies in areas related to law: history, philosophy, political science, and sociology, among others. In addition, the Law and Society curriculum should be a sound background for students who later choose to pursue the study of law in a professional school of law.
Students may select Law and Society as a major with the departments of Anthropology, Economics, History, Philosophy, Political Science, and Sociology.
The major requirements for the B.A. degree in Law and Society are as follows:
1. Specified requirements of the cooperating department (See the departments of Anthropology, Economics, History, Philosophy, Political Science, or Sociology.)
2. Requirements for Law and Society (36 units)
Note: In filling the dual requirements of the major, students may not count more than two courses toward both parts of their total requirements (specified departmental requirements and Law and Society requirements).
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