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    Apr 19, 2024  
American University Catalog 2019-2020 
    
American University Catalog 2019-2020 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

WCL General Information


Academic Programs

The academic program leading to the Juris Doctor (JD) degree is designed to allow students to develop special skills in public law, business and commercial law, international law, property and land use, and related fields. In addition to the JD program, Washington College of Law offers the Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD), Master of Legal Studies (MLS), and Master of Laws (LLM) in Advocacy; Gender, International, and Comparative Law; Intellectual Property; International Arbitration and Business; International Business and Trade; International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law; Derechos Humanos y Derecho Humanitario; International Legal Studies; and Law and Government.

WCL also participates in joint degree programs with other American University (AU) schools and International Dual Degrees with partner universities abroad. Within the US, students have the opportunity to receive both a JD from the Washington College of Law and a master’s degree in International Affairs (MA) with the School of International Service ; Justice, Law and Criminology (MS) , Public Administration (MPA) , or Public Policy (MPP)  with the School of Public Affairs ; or Business Administration (MBA)  with the Kogod School of Business . Joint degree LLM programs are also available with the MBA, MPA, or MPP. Opportunities for JD students outside of the US include: earning a JD from the Washington College of Law and a JD-equivalent degree from the Monash University Law School in Australia (JD); University of Ottawa Common Law Section in Canada (JD); Université Paris Nanterre in France (M1 & M2); or an LLM with the Universidad Carlos III in Spain; LUISS in Italy; or the Universidad Pontificia Comillas in Spain.

American University’s law school has a strong national and international substantive focus, offering a broad range of courses in addition to the basic program necessary for state bar examinations. Clinical programs involve students in providing representation, under close faculty supervision, of clients with pending legal problems. Students have responsibility for every phase of cases, from the initial client interview through the trial or appeal. The Clinics include Community and Economic Development Law, Criminal Justice, DC Law Students in Court, Disability Rights Law, Civil Advocacy, Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property Law, Janet R. Spragens Federal Tax, Immigrant Justice, International Humans Rights Law, and Women and the Law. For more information, go to: www.wcl.american.edu/clinical.

Beyond the classroom, clinical programs, and supervised externships and field placements at federal, state, and local agencies, courts, and legislatures, academic offerings are enriched by an extensive independent study program allowing for intensive faculty-student work on complex legal research projects. In addition, Washington College of Law publications, including The American University Law Review, The American University International Law Review, The Administrative Law Review, The American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law, and The American University Business Law Review provide opportunities for students to develop expertise in traditional legal writing and research. For more information and a full listing of WCL publications, go to: www.wcl.american.edu/pub.cfm.

The basic first-year classes are taught using case analysis and dialogue as well as the problem method. First-year students take Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Contracts, Criminal Law, Property, Torts, and a year-long course in legal research and writing. Upper-class courses are mostly elective and include a wide variety of teaching styles and formats.

Law Library

The Pence Law Library is the central hub of legal research for Washington College of Law students and faculty. In addition to extensive holdings of print and electronic legal publications and periodicals, the law library provides access to databases such as LexisNexis, Westlaw, Bloomberg Law, HeinOnline, ProQuest Congressional, and WorldCat, as well as the websites and catalogs of thousands of other libraries worldwide, including the Library of Congress, the libraries of all members of the Washington Research Library Consortium (WRLC), and the libraries of all other area law schools. Services to WCL alumni include off site access to HeinOnLine’s Law Journal Library and ABA Law Library Collection Periodicals, Fastcase’s federal and state case law collection via Hein, JSTOR, and Academic Search, Alumni Edition. All holdings and databases can be searched through the Law Library’s catalog, LEAGLE, at https://leagle.wcl.american.edu/.

The library’s special collections include depositories of US and European Union documents; the Goodman Rare Book Collection; the Richard Baxter Collection in International Law; a collection of litigation documents, including transcripts from the Iran Contra controversy of the late 1980s; the archives of the Women’s Bar Association of the District of Columbia; and the Washington College of Law archives. For more information on the Pence Law Library, go to: https://library.wcl.american.edu/.

Legal Study in Washington, DC

The Washington College of Law is located in the northwest section of the city a short distance from Congress, the Supreme Court, the United States District Court and Court of Appeals, and the Maryland, Virginia, and District of Columbia courts. Washington, DC is the center of all federal regulatory process, and is the principal home of every major federal agency, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Communications Commission, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Federal Trade Commission. Washington, DC is also the base for cabinet-level departments such as the Department of Energy, the Department of Education, the Department of Justice, and other agencies which perform functions critical to the federal system and contribute to an environment for legal education unparalleled outside this city. Judicial, executive, and legislative internships form an integral part of the legal education of many WCL students.

In addition, Washington, DC is the seat of the world’s principal intergovernmental financial institutions, including the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the Inter-American Development Bank. Also located in Washington, DC are the Organization of American States and the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization. Private or nongovernmental organizations, among them Amnesty International and the International Human Rights Law Group, have offices in Washington, DC, and a majority of the world’s leading international law firms can be found here.

Taking advantage of this natural setting for legal study and work, WCL offers many unique courses taught by its full-time faculty and by specialists who are members of the adjunct faculty. Field components are available in various courts and government agencies, and are carefully supervised by faculty members and designated field supervisors. For second- and third-year students interested in part-time law-related jobs, the Office of Career & Professional Development coordinates requests for law student employment from law firms, corporations, public interest organizations, courts, and government agencies.

For information regarding Washington College of Law admissions, financial aid, or programs, please contact:

Office of Admissions
Washington College of Law
4300 Nebraska Avenue, NW, Suite C201
Washington, DC 20016-2132
202-274-4101
wcladmit@wcl.american.edu
www.wcl.american.edu/admiss/
For more information, visit wcl.american.edu