JD Program: Curriculum

1L Year

The unique introductory program helps first-year students master the technical aspects of the law as a basis for understanding its theory and substance. Electives are available as soon as the spring of your 1L year.

Accordion Group

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  • FIRST SEMESTER (16 Credits)

    Contracts or Property (4 Credits)
    Contracts
    Examines the purpose and scope of the legal protection accorded agreements. The course focuses on:

    • Problems of contract formation and interpretation
    • Remedies for breach of contract
    • The offer and acceptance of a contract
    • The effect of changed circumstances, and more complicated questions, such as contracts that are impossible to perform.

    Property
    Focuses on basic principles governing private and public control over tangible and intangible resources, especially land. The course addresses concepts and policies concerning property and special concepts concerning real estate, such as estates in land, future interests, and the rule against perpetuities. The course also studies real estate transactions, recording, methods of title assurance, easements, covenants, and land use controls.

    Torts (4 Credits)
    Considers the issues involved in assessing whether the law should require a person to compensate another for harm intentionally or unintentionally inflicted. It analyzes the public policy positions implicit in the legal concepts that courts use in tort cases, as well as the ways in which social problems and the law of torts interact.

    Civil Procedure (3 Credits)
    An introduction to the process of civil litigation, emphasizing questions of jurisdiction, pleadings, discovery, remedies, and appellate review.

    In addition to the above traditional, required first-year courses, all entering students also take:

    Elements of Law (3 Credits)
    Focuses explicitly on legal institutions, the theories underlying them, the process of legal reasoning, and the ways in which the law evolves.
    Legal Communication & Research Skills I (2 Credits)
    In the fall, law students are introduced to foundational lawyering skills. They learn to read judicial opinions, analyze the law, and apply the law to a set of facts. Students write objective legal memoranda of the type that a junior associate or judicial clerk might be asked to write. They also learn how to communicate with clients. Learn More

  • SECOND SEMESTER (16 Credits)

    Contracts or Property (4 Credits)
    Contracts
    Examines the purpose and scope of the legal protection accorded agreements. The course focuses on:

    • Problems of contract formation and interpretation
    • Remedies for breach of contract
    • The offer and acceptance of a contract
    • The effect of changed circumstances, and more complicated questions, such as contracts that are impossible to perform.

    Property
    Focuses on basic principles governing private and public control over tangible and intangible resources, especially land. The course addresses concepts and policies concerning property and special concepts concerning real estate, such as estates in land, future interests, and the rule against perpetuities. The course also studies real estate transactions, recording, methods of title assurance, easements, covenants, and land use controls.

    Criminal Procedure (3 Credits)
    An introduction to the criminal process with special emphasis on constitutional issues. It covers arrest, interrogation, search and seizure, the right to counsel and related topics.

    U.S. Constitutional Law I (4 Credits)
    A study of the American constitutional system, concentrating on the idea of judicial review, relationships among the three branches of government, and allocations of responsibility between federal and state governments.

    Elective (3 Credits)
    Second-semester students choose an elective from a list of courses for first-year students. These courses deal with regulatory issues, statutory law, international and comparative law, and other matters of law not generally available in the traditional first-year program. The following are representative of the elective course offerings from spring 2023:

    • Trusts & Estates
    • Systemic Advocacy
    • Jurisprudence
    • Environmental Law
    • Business Associations
    • The Future of Law Practice
    • International Law
    • Substantive Criminal Law

    Legal Communication & Research Skills II
    This course shifts to persuasive writing and advocacy, and students work on a litigation matter from filing to appeal.

2L and 3L Years

Miami Law students receive a broad-based legal education and have the option to concentrate on special areas of interest through programs, concentrations, joint degrees, and experiential learning options in their 2L and 3L years. In contrast to the first-year curriculum, there are no required courses during a law student’s second and third years of study, but there are requirements that must be met. Accordingly, after the first year, the list of courses, seminars, and workshops offered is extensive and this includes innovative short courses to explore niche areas and stay on the pulse of the latest developments in the law.

Areas and Fields of Study

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