
Registrar
HUMAN RIGHTS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE COURSES – FACULTY RECOMMENDATIONS
Advanced Constitutional Law Seminar
Asian American Jurisprudence
Civil Rights Clinic
*Civil Rights Law
Community Education Seminar
*Constitutional Law II
**Critical Race Theory
Disability Rights
Education Policy and the Law
Employment Discrimination
Farmworkers and the Law
Feminist Legal Theory
Housing Law
Immigration Law Clinic
**Immigration Law and Procedure
**International Human Rights
Juvenile Justice
**Labor Law I
**Labor Law II
Latinos & Latinas and the Law
Law and Rural Livelihoods
Legal Psychology
Native American Law Seminar
Prison Law Clinic
Public Benefits Law
**Public Interest Law
Public Interest Law Externship
Selected Topics in Constitutional Law: Habeas Corpus and 11th Amendment
Sex-Based Discrimination
Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity, and the Law
Tax and Distributive Justice
Transnational Criminal Law
Women and the Law Practicum
Women, Islam, and the Law
*Basic Core: Core human rights and social justice courses identified as essential by the faculty teaching in this area (see below) for all J.D. students (preferably taken in the second year):
Civil Rights Law
Constitutional Law II
Note: These courses assume students have no prior coursework in human rights and social justice law.
Professional Responsibility is an essential course in all disciplines. It provides the "rules of the road" that lawyers must follow, regardless of their area of expertise.
**Expanded Core: Core human rights and social justice law courses (in addition to the Basic Core above) recommended by the law faculty teaching in this area for students interested in human rights and social justice law practices:
Critical Race Theory
Immigration Law and Procedure
International Human Rights
Labor Law I and II
Public Interest Law
Additional human rights and social justice law courses as schedules permit.
Human Rights and Social Justice Law Faculty: Professors Brownstein, Cooper, Jaime, Johnson, Jorjani, Joslin, Larson, Murphy, Perez, Pruitt, Reynoso, Saucedo, Sunder, and White.
Note: The above recommendations are made by the Human Rights and Social Justice Law Faculty and not the Law Faculty as a whole.














