Course Number
CLS-186-01
Course Description
A survey of Roman law with special attention to constitutional history in the context of the conceptual development of civil law. Basic concepts of Rome's civil law include person (who qualified and under what conditions?), property (at the end of the day, what else was there?), succession (i.e., who inherited property when the owner died?), contract (the fine print has been important for a long time!), and delict (wrong-doing, damages, and remedies or, failing that, punishments). We will look, in other words, at the Roman constitution and its intersections with basic civil rights and the procedures for conducting one's affairs legally. Crimes and their punishments will hold our interest too, as will the influence of Roman legal thinking on European and American jurisprudence.
Academic Term
Instructor
Gazzarri, Tommaso
Location & Meeting Time
Reamer Campus Center-AUD M/W 03:20PM-05:00PM LEC
Petition
N
Credits
1.00
Capacity
28
Total Students
28
Additional Information