Apr 25, 2024  
2016-2017 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog 
    
2016-2017 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


How to Read Catalog Course Descriptions

Texas Tech offers nearly 5,000 courses as part of its curriculum. These courses are listed alphabetically by subject prefix within each college and departmental section of this catalog. The courses appear in numerical order, moving from beginning freshman or developmental level courses to graduate, research, and professional courses.

Not all courses listed in this catalog are offered every year. An online class schedule published before each registration period indicates courses that will be available during the upcoming term or semester and when each class will meet. The class schedule can be found at (www.depts.ttu.edu/officialpublications/class_schedule/index.php). The university reserves the right to cancel any scheduled course or withdraw any program from the list of offerings when the best interests of the institution require such action.

Courses are designated by a subject prefix and number along with a descriptive title. Learn more  about interpreting the course descriptions found throughout the catalog.

 

Kinesiology (Graduate Courses)

  
  • KIN 5316 - Research Methods II

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: C or better in KIN 5315  or equivalent. Advanced and applied concept of research methods, research design, treatment and interpretation of data.
  
  • KIN 5317 - Seminar

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Specific research topics will be studied. May be repeated for credit.
  
  • KIN 5330 - Health Issues for the Active Female

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    The Female Athlete Triad is targeted. The triad consists of: (1) energy deficiency with or without disordered eating; (2) menstrual disturbances/amenorrhea; and (3) bone loss/osteoporosis.
  
  • KIN 5332 - Applied Physiology of Exercise

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Application of the principles of exercise physiology to assess health, fitness, muscle metabolism, and physiological adaptations with exercise training.
  
  • KIN 5334 - Clinical Exercise Testing and Prescription

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Study of the pathophysiology of cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases with concentration on the recommendations for exercise in clinical populations.
  
  • KIN 5335 - Cardiopulmonary Exercise Physiology

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Biophysical principles, cellular mechanics, fiber contraction, and feedback control systems in cardiovascular and pulmonary function is highlighted.
  
  • KIN 5336 - Skeletal Muscle Physiology

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Structural and functional characteristics of skeletal muscle and the regulation of energy pathways that support muscle contraction.
  
  • KIN 5337 - Electrocardiography

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    The art and science of the interpretation of the 12-lead electrocardiogram and the underlying cardiovascular physiology is highlighted. ACLS emergency drugs are emphasized.
  
  • KIN 5339 - Laboratory Techniques in Exercise Physiology

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: C or better in KIN 5336  or instructor consent. Laboratory-based course designed to provide students with basic analytical methods and procedures used in laboratories investigating questions related to biochemical and molecular exercise physiology.
  
  • KIN 5353 - Assessment of Muscular Performance

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Details the techniques used to assess human performance with an emphasis on athletic performance testing and tools.
  
  • KIN 5355 - Program Design for Strength and Conditioning

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Examines the outcomes associated with different strength training and conditioning regimens.
  
  • KIN 5357 - Applied Neuromuscular Performance

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Examines the basic and applied principles of neuromuscular performance and the effects of exercise applications on the functioning of the neuromuscular system.
  
  • KIN 6000 - Master’s Thesis

    V1-6 Semester Credit Hours
  
  • KIN 7000 - Research

    V1-12 Semester Credit Hours

Latin American and Iberian Studies (Graduate Courses)

  
  • LAIS 5300 - Directed Studies

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor and Director of Latin American and Iberian Studies. Content will vary to meet the needs of students. May be repeated for credit.

Landscape Architecture (Undergraduate Courses)

  
  • LARC 1302 - Introduction to Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    An introduction to the multidisciplinary field of landscape architecture exploring its historical evolution, highlighting its interaction with arts and science, and examining its contemporary leaders. Fulfills core Creative Arts requirement.
  
  • LARC 1401 - Landscape Architecture Drawing and Drafting

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Introduction to drafting equipment, drafting and drawing. Construction of one-point and two-point perspective, shade and shadow, elements of visual composition.
  
  • LARC 1402 - Landscape Architecture Graphics

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 1401 , LA majors only. Develop knowledge and skills for effective graphic expression of design. Emphasis on scaled drawings, three-dimensional representation and color graphics.
  
  • LARC 2100 - Landscape Architecture Portfolio Preparation

    1 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 2401 . Introduction to professional portfolio development for landscape architecture and preparation of each individual portfolio for faculty review. S.
  
  • LARC 2302 - History of Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    History of landscape architecture. Design as expression of culture and society’s relationship to nature. Geographical, historical, and cultural context of major movements in landscape architecture. Fulfills core Language, Philosophy, and Culture and multicultural requirements. F.
  
  • LARC 2308 - Computer-Aided Design in Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 1402 , LA majors only or consent of instructor. Hands-on introduction to current computer-aided design technology most applicable to landscape architecture. F.
  
  • LARC 2309 - Advanced Computer Graphics in Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 2308 , LA majors only. Exploration of contemporary applications of three dimensional modeling and computer rendering in the profession of landscape architecture. S.
  
  • LARC 2401 - Basic Design in Landscape Architecture

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 1402 . LA majors only. A basic course in landscape architecture incorporating the principles of art and landscape architecture in design. F.
  
  • LARC 2402 - Landscape Architecture Design Process

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 1402 , LARC 2401  and PSS 2330 . A continuation of basic design with emphasis on site inventory, analysis, and programming in relationship to the design process.
  
  • LARC 2404 - Landscape Architecture Grading and Drainage

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 2402 . Introduction to site layout, grading and drainage, earthwork and runoff computations, and site implementation drawing techniques.
  
  • LARC 3401 - Landscape Architecture Site Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 2100  and LARC 2402 . Site analysis and design as they apply to projects of various scale, scope, and resolution. F.
  
  • LARC 3402 - Master Planning

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 3401  and LARC 2404 . Comprehensive design problems integrating aspects of site design, planting design and construction.
  
  • LARC 3403 - Planting Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 3401  and PSS 3318 . Theory and practice including plants in site design, planting design techniques, planting plans and technical specifications.
  
  • LARC 3404 - Landscape Architecture Site Construction and Development

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 2404 . Complex grading and drainage, drainage structures, horizontal and vertical circulation alignment in large scale site development.
  
  • LARC 4000 - Internship

    V1-6 Semester Credit Hours
    Minimum 8 weeks, prior departmental approval, and must be completed for graduation.
  
  • LARC 4001 - Landscape Architecture Problems

    V1-4 Semester Credit Hours
    An investigation of a problem in the profession of special interest to the student. Open to all advanced students.
  
  • LARC 4100 - Seminar

    1 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: Senior standing. Assigned readings, informal discussions, oral reports, and papers.
  
  • LARC 4101 - Proposal Writing in Landscape Architecture

    1 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 4402  and ENGL 2311 . Comprehensive writing for landscape architecture final project thesis. The course includes program development methodology and the framework for proposal writing. (Writing Intensive) F.
  
  • LARC 4302 - Environmental Planning for Sustainable Development

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: BIOL 1305  and BIOL 1113 . An introduction to environmental planning issues with emphasis on the integration of related disciplines to attain environmentally and socially sustainable development. F.
  
  • LARC 4311 - Professional Practice

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: Fifth-year standing. Methods, procedures, and ethics of professional practice of landscape architecture. F.
  
  • LARC 4401 - Urban Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 3402 , LARC 3403 , LARC 3404 ; 2. 5 GPA. Public urban spaces and their surrounding built edges. Organization, form, and character of streets, parks, and plazas.
  
  • LARC 4402 - Regional Planning and Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 2309 , LARC 4401 ; GEOG 3300 ; 2. 5 GPA. Regional landscape planning and design in landscape architecture based on natural and cultural resource factors.
  
  • LARC 4404 - Landscape Architecture Materials and Details

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 3404 . Introduction of landscape architecture construction systems, materials, irrigation, retaining walls, lighting, structures, joining of materials, and implementation drawings.
  
  • LARC 4506 - Collaboration Studio

    5 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 2309  and LARC 4402 ; 2. 5 GPA. An interdisciplinary studio for the design professions which address the process and skills necessary for collaboration and teamwork. Field trip required. F.
  
  • LARC 4507 - Landscape Architecture Senior Project

    5 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 4506  and LARC 4101 ; 2. 5 GPA. Individual design demonstration project representing comprehensive skilled synthesis of knowledge and professional skills developed in study of landscape architecture. (Writing Intensive) S.

Landscape Architecture (Graduate Courses)

  
  • LARC 5001 - Special Problems in Landscape Architecture

    V1-4 Semester Credit Hours
    Selected problems based on student’s needs and interests not included in other courses. May be repeated for credit with approval of department.
  
  • LARC 5201 - Landscape Architecture Graphics

    2 Semester Credit Hours
    Introduction to drafting and landscape graphics. Developing skills for effective graphic expression of design in two and three-dimensional representation. F.
  
  • LARC 5302 - Advanced Environmental Planning for Sustainable Development

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    An introduction to environmental planning issues with emphasis on the integration of related disciplines to attain environmentally and socially sustainable development. F.
  
  • LARC 5308 - Computer-Aided Design in Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Hands-on introduction to computer-aided design technology that is currently most applicable to the needs of the profession of landscape architecture. F.
  
  • LARC 5309 - Advanced Computer-Aided Design in Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 5308 . Advanced application of CAD in landscape architecture. S.
  
  • LARC 5310 - History of Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Investigation of the issues, work, and personalities in landscape architecture as expressed through design and their relationship to and influence on society and nature. F.
  
  • LARC 5312 - Planting Design

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: PSS 6001 . The characteristics of plants with their forms in the landscape. Special emphasis on preparation of planting plans. S.
  
  • LARC 5314 - Landscape Architecture Grading and Drainage

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Introduction to site grading and drainage, earthwork and runoff computations and site implementation drawing techniques. F.
  
  • LARC 5315 - Landscape Architecture Site Construction and Development

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 5314 . Complex grading and drainage, drainage structures: storm water management, and horizontal and vertical circulation alignment in large scale site development. S.
  
  • LARC 5316 - Landscape Architecture Materials and Details

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 5315 . The study of landscape architecture site construction and materials, products and their application and integration to the man-made environment. F.
  
  • LARC 5401 - Landscape Architecture Principles and Process

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    An accelerated course emphasizing professional drafting and graphics, design principles and theory and the introduction of site analysis.
  
  • LARC 5402 - Site Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 5201 , LARC 5314 , and LARC 5401 . An accelerated course emphasizing landscape site analysis process, and conceptual design and theory, with a continuation of professional graphics techniques.
  
  • LARC 6000 - Master’s Thesis

    V1-6 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 6203 .
  
  • LARC 6001 - Master’s Project Thesis

    V1-6 Semester Credit Hours
    An individual professional design project demonstrating comprehensive skills, synthesis of knowledge, and professional project management abilities developed during the study of landscape architecture.
  
  • LARC 6100 - Landscape Architecture Seminar

    1 Semester Credit Hours
    Critical readings, discussion and writing on a range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary planning, design, management, and environmental issues.
  
  • LARC 6203 - Thesis Research, Preparation, and Organization

    2 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LARC 6301 . Preparation of thesis project content, selection of the thesis committee, and the proposal submission to the Graduate Studies Committee for approval.
  
  • LARC 6301 - Research Methodology for Planning and Design

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Introduction to the research process and methods used in the design-planning field. F.
  
  • LARC 6302 - Administrative Aspects of Landscape Architecture

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    The methods, procedures, and organizational structure of professional practice in landscape architecture. F.
  
  • LARC 6306 - Special Problems

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Methods of interpretation of planning and designing projects that influence the historical, ethnic, and cultural aspects of a region.
  
  • LARC 6401 - Urban Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 5402 , LARC 5315 . Analysis, planning and design of urban environments with emphasis on urban development theories, municipal regulations, and master plan development.
  
  • LARC 6402 - Regional Landscape Planning

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 5308 , LARC 6401 . Theory of planning and design for large scale regional landscape, including an intensive geographic information system (G.I.S.) seminar.
  
  • LARC 6406 - Collaboration Design

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LARC 5308 , LARC 6402 . An interdisciplinary studio for landscape architects, architects, and interior designers addressing the process and skills necessary for collaboration and teamwork.
  
  • LARC 7000 - Research

    V1-12 Semester Credit Hours

Latin (Undergraduate Courses)

  
  • LAT 1501 - A Beginning Course in Latin I

    5 Semester Credit Hours
    TCCNS: LATI1411
  
  • LAT 1502 - A Beginning Course in Latin II

    5 Semester Credit Hours
    TCCNS: LATI1412 Prerequisite: LAT 1501 .
  
  • LAT 1507 - Comprehensive Latin Review First Year

    5 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: placement exam or consent of the coordinator of the Latin program/undergraduate advisor. A comprehensive one-semester review of first year Latin for qualified students.
  
  • LAT 2301 - A Second Course in Latin I

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    TCCNS: LATI2311 Prerequisite: LAT 1502  or LAT 1507 . Review; selected readings from standard authors.
  
  • LAT 2302 - A Second Course in Latin II

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    TCCNS: LATI2312 Prerequisite: LAT 2301 . Review; selected readings from standard authors.
  
  • LAT 4300 - Individual Problems in Latin

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LAT 2302  or consent of instructor. Contents will vary to meet the needs of the students. Independent reading under guidance of a staff member. May be repeated for credit up to 18 hours with consent of instructor.
  
  • LAT 4305 - Individualized Readings in Latin Literature

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LAT 2302  or consent of instructor. Contents will vary to meet the needs of students. Major works of selected Latin writers. May be repeated once for credit with consent of instructor.

Latin (Graduate Courses)

  
  • LAT 5304 - Latin Poetry: Epic, Lyric, Elegiac, and Pastoral

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Study of one or more poetic genres. May be repeated up to 9 credit hours with different content.
  
  • LAT 5310 - Seminar in Latin Literature

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Content will vary to meet the needs of the students.
  
  • LAT 5341 - Intensive Latin for Graduate Research I

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Grammar and readings for reading knowledge. Equivalent to one year of normal coursework. Not for classics majors or Latin minor graduate degree requirements.
  
  • LAT 5342 - Intensive Latin for Graduate Research II

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LAT 5341  or LAT 1502 . Continuation of LAT 5341 . Equivalent to completion of LAT 2302. Not for classics majors or Latin minor graduate degree requirements.
  
  • LAT 5360 - Latin Prose

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Selected readings from Latin texts in history, philosophy, oratory, rhetoric, epistolography, satire, biography, and the novel. Topics may vary. May be repeated up to 9 credit hours with different content.
  
  • LAT 7000 - Research

    V1-12 Semester Credit Hours

Law

  
  • LAW 5307 - Legal Practice II

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Instruction in legal method, including case and statutory analysis, through objective and persuasive legal writing and oral argument. Instruction in the sources and use of materials for legal research, including computer-assisted research, and in legal citation. Written assignments include letters, memoranda, and briefs. Introduction to dispute resolution processes including mediation, arbitration, settlement conferences, mini-trials, and summary jury trial. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5310 - Criminal Law

    3 Semester Credit Hours
    Inquiry into the sources and goals of the criminal law, limitations on the state’s power to define criminal liability, general principles of liability and defenses, and the characteristics of particular crimes. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5401 - Constitutional Law

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    A study of the federal judiciary’s doctrine and practice of judicial review, judicial power, and jurisdiction of the courts, the power of Congress to regulate commerce, the power of the states to regulate commerce, and the protection of private rights, privileges, and immunities under the Constitution, which includes the substantive rights of freedom of enterprise, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, and freedom from discrimination. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5402 - Contracts

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    A study of the enforceability of promises, the creation of contractual obligations, performance and breach, the impact of the contract on the legal relationships of nonparties, and the examination of contract doctrine in three settings: personal service, sales of goods, and construction contracts. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5403 - Property

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    An introduction to the law of personal property and real property, including estates and other interests in land, real property marketing and conveyancing, and landlord and tenant problems. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5403 - Torts

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    Standards and principles governing legal liability for intentional and unintentional invasions of interests of person and property. First-year course required for all students.
  
  • LAW 5405 - Civil Procedure

    4 Semester Credit Hours
    A general survey using federal court procedure as a model, including jurisdiction of courts, pleading, disposition without trial, joinder of claims and parties, effects of judgments, and appellate review. First-year course required for all law students.
  
  • LAW 6001 - Creditors’ Rights and Bankruptcy

    V2-4 Semester Credit Hours
    An introduction to creditors’ remedies and debtor’s rights under state and federal law. The primary focus is the Federal Bankruptcy Code, but also includes federal law relating to debt collection, state law relating to creditors’ prejudgment and post-judgment remedies, fraudulent transfers, and exempt property.
  
  • LAW 6002 - Bioethics

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    This seminar uses an interdisciplinary approach to studying moral issues in the field of medical treatment and research. Students will examine the legal, ethical, and policy aspects of bioethics controversies. Topics include privacy and confidentiality, human experimentation, the right to refuse treatment, reproduction, organ transplantation, and genetic engineering. Students will write a paper rather than take a final. The paper may be used to satisfy the advanced writing requirement.
  
  • LAW 6004 - European Union: Institutions and Principles

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    A survey of EU history and politics; the legal institutions, their structures, powers, and enforcement actions; basic legal principles; and administrative and constitutional pressures on the EU.
  
  • LAW 6005 - Estate Planning and Community Property Law Journal

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Students will be permitted to receive course credit and satisfy the advanced writing requirement under the same rules as allowed for Law Review.
  
  • LAW 6006 - Law and Biotechnology

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    This interdisciplinary course is designed for nonscience and science majors to examine the law and the underlying science and policy of biotechnology. The course will examine biotechnology issues in law concerning genetically modified organisms and foods, stem cells, cloning, DNA, the Human Genome, intellectual property, patenting, and human health and environmental impacts. These issues will be considered within the context of governmental management as well as private sector interaction. The course will include a trial practice opportunity related to a biotechnology case file with a focus on skills concerning lawyers and expert witnesses.
  
  • LAW 6009 - Insurance Law

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    The law applicable to the formation, construction, and enforcement of contracts for life, casualty, and property insurance; government regulation of the insurance industry.
  
  • LAW 6010 - Global Biosecurity Law

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Examines international history in biodefense law, including major treaties in biosecurity and biosafety law, the Biological Weapons Convention, and the Cartegena Protocol; biosecurity regulations and legal frameworks in other countries; international law and public health as well as regulatory approaches of the World Health Organization; and biodiplomacy and the role of Interpol in biocrimes.
  
  • LAW 6011 - Remedies

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    This course is composed of a combination of legal subjects and deals with the questions and answers concerning what one expects a court to do after a plaintiff prevails on the merits. Several possible remedies might arise from the same set of facts or a claim. Remedies almost always involve issues of discretion: discretion for the judge in fashioning an equitable remedy, discretion for the jury in assessing damages, and discretion of lawmakers in setting the boundaries for these decisions.
  
  • LAW 6012 - Taxation of International Transactions

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LAW 6434 . Addresses the tax consequence of international transactions. It will provide the student with a basic introduction to corporate and individual international taxation. It includes a discussion of major concepts relating to the taxation of U.S. citizens, residents, and domestic corporations on their foreign source income and the taxation of nonresidents and foreign corporations on their .S. source income. The course includes a discussion of the effect of tax treaties on the taxation of international transactions and rules preventing double taxation of foreign source income.
  
  • LAW 6013 - Regulation of Human Subject Research

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Considers the legal regulation of ethical principles that govern human subject research both in the U.S. and overseas.
  
  • LAW 6014 - Telecommunications Law and Policy

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Examines the law governing telecommunications a well as policy considerations underlying that law. Topics may include, among others, regulation of the internet, broadband access, telephone, cable, and satellite.
  
  • LAW 6016 - Transactional Practice

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisites: LAW 6435 , LAW 6434 . Use cases studies, problems, and simulated negotiation and drafting exercises to teach students skills that transactional lawyers possess by focusing on business and tax issues that arise during the formation, operation, and disposition life cycle of businesses. Emphasizes planning traps and creative planning strategies as well as proper techniques for drafting and negotiating business agreements. Students will learn how to help clients make business decisions. Students also will develop an awareness of the impact of tax law on business decisions. Enrollment is limited to 20 students.
  
  • LAW 6017 - Public Health Law

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Provides an overview of fundamental public health law principles by looking at such topics as immunization, infectious disease, quarantine, newborn screening, organ transplantation, clinical drug trials, medical surveillance, correctional health, and international health interventions. Students will also explore the ethical, policy, economic, and human rights dimensions of these issues.
  
  • LAW 6018 - Accounting for Lawyers

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    This course is intended for the law student who does not have an accounting background. Topics covered include basic accounting concepts and terminology; how to analyze and understand financial statements; and legal issues involving financial statements, including how to recognize possible manipulations or distortions
  
  • LAW 6019 - Estate and Gift Taxation

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    Prerequisite: LAW 6415  and LAW 6434 . An estate planning course that examines the impact of federal transfer taxes (gift tax, estate tax, and generation-skipping transfer tax) on various types of dispositions of property during life and at death, the administrative and judicial process in resolving federal estate and gift tax controversies, and the social and economic implications of taxation of distributions of wealth.
  
  • LAW 6021 - Contemporary Legal Development

    V1-4 Semester Credit Hours
    Topics, which will be announced, will emphasize current issues and problems in law. May be repeated for credit.
  
  • LAW 6022 - Conflict of Laws

    V2-3 Semester Credit Hours
    The law relating to transactions or occurrences when some or all of the operative facts arise in more than one state; jurisdiction of court’s enforcement of foreign judgments and decrees; choice of conflicting law in situations involving torts, contracts, property, marriage, divorce, and procedural problems.
 

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