Legal Studies is an
interdisciplinary, liberal arts major that engages the meanings, values, practices, and institutions of law and
legality. The Legal Studies curriculum examines how law shapes and is
shaped by political, economic, and cultural forces. The major is
designed to stimulate critical understanding of and inquiry about the
theoretical frameworks, historical dynamics, and cultural embeddedness
of law. The Legal Studies faculty and students grapple with important
questions of social policy within the framework of significant
concerns in jurisprudence and theories of justice. These concerns
include individual liberty, privacy, and autonomy; political and social
equality; the just distribution of resources and opportunities within society;
the relationship between citizens and the state; democratic
participation and representation; the moral commitments of the community;
and the preservation of human dignity. The major’s course offerings examine
law and legality from both humanist and empirical perspectives. Courses
are organized into interdisciplinary topical Areas that transcend
disciplinary boundaries in the interest of collaborative inquiry. Students are required to complete 4
prerequisites and 8 upper division requirements. There is no minor. Students
must now declare under the New Plan. When looking at requirements on this site,
please always click on ‘New Plan’. For those who declared before the changes
were put in place, please click on the Old Plan throughout the site.