In the field of Comparative Law, students are encouraged to think about the nature and value of comparative scholarship through the courses that they take (particularly the Legal Traditions course, which is required for all students in Comparative Law). In that way, students are given opportunities to explore how juridical analyses are enriched through openness to learning from diversity in research methods, theoretical frameworks, legal traditions and doctrines, languages, and disciplinary perspectives.
LLM in Comparative Law with Thesis and Non-Thesis requirements (based on program revision as of Fall 2018)
Master of Laws with Thesis | Master of Laws Non-Thesis | |
Credits | 45 credits (30 research credits + 15 course credits) |
45 credits (15 research credits + 30 course credits) |
Required courses |
12 credits: |
12 credits: |
Research | Thesis 30 credits: CMPL 612 - Master's Thesis 1 CMPL 613 - Master's Thesis 2 CMPL 614 - Master's Thesis 3 CMPL 615 - Master's Thesis 4 CMPL 616 - Master's Thesis 5 CMPL 617 - Master's Thesis 6 |
Research project 15 credits: CMPL 655 - Research Project 1 |
Complementary credits | Elective courses (3) |
Elective courses (18) |