Master of International Law (M.L.)

Career & Outcomes

The course offers a wide range of elective units in international and transnational areas. Students who want to pursue public international law can study courses like the Law of Armed Conflict, Human Rights, and International Criminal Law. Those who wish to pursue private international law, on the other hand, can study International Environmental Law, WTO Dispute Resolution, and International Intellectual Property laws. Students who want to explore a course that incorporates experiential learning will study International Business Practice because it offers a more hands-on approach to legal issues in business. The course helps students in identifying legal issues, research the necessary and applicable laws to develop legal strategies that help them present findings in real business scenarios. The students also get to work with MBA teams in the preparation of international business plans that help in the introduction of products and services to selected global markets.

Program Outline:

Core Courses

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course covers the foundation of United States Law from 1900-Presence.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course covers the foundation of Roman Law and the fundamental principles of Law in Latin American countries.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course examines the foundation of the English language about legal jargon and verbiage for international transitions.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This advanced course provides the graduate students with the terminology to prepare and analyze contract in English using legal verbiage.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course examines the foundation of the Spanish language concerning legal jargon and verbiage for international transitions.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This advanced course provides the graduate students with the terminology to prepare and analyze contract in English using legal verbiage.

Total Credits Hours

18

Concentration Courses

3 Credits

Course Description:

The course designed to teach “real-world” legal research skills that will prepare … This course begins with an overview of the U.S. Constitution, the structure of the … and law enforcement, privacy, and computerized records, and privacy at work.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course provides a general introduction to international law and its role in today’s complex and interdependent world. We will begin by considering fundamental questions about the nature of international law, such as the origins of international law in the sovereign equality of states; the sources of international law (including treaties and customary international law); the subjects of international law; principles of state responsibility; the bases upon which states may exercise jurisdiction; and the global governance challenges.

3 Credits

Course Description:

The Philosophy of law course examines the nature of law and law’s relationship to other systems of norms, especially ethics and political philosophy. … Normative jurisprudence investigates both the non-legal norms that shape law and the legal norms that are generated by the law and guide human action.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course provides graduate students with an opportunity to apply their knowledge about fundamentals law and ethics to dilemmas arising across the human lifecycle, from start to end of life.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This covers the historical events between roughly 500 B.C. and 500 A.D., and the Romans developed the most elaborate and most comprehensive secular legal system that was known in the ancient world. This system was revived in the high middle ages and became an important (some would the most important) influence on the development of modern western legal systems. This course introduces that system: the political and social context in which it arose, the categories of private law which are applied in its “classical” period, its speculative origins in the distant past, and the mechanisms by which it developed. The course thus raises important substantive, comparative, and methodological issues, issues that are of concern to all lawyers, whether or not they happen to be interested in Rome.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course offers graduate law students with the opportunity to study two areas of great significance in contemporary society in a three-year program that combines the foundations of law alongside compulsory and optional modules in economics.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course covers the societal change that often requires law and politics to work together. In this degree, you’ll study public policy in its legal context and gain the skills to work in firms with governmental interests.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course is a world-renowned taught graduate course in law, designed to serve outstanding law students from common law backgrounds in the United States and the international stages.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course is designed to aim to provide students with the knowledge and understanding of legal aspects and implications of social policy affecting today’s society, the theories, and their strategic applications operating within a changing global environment.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course offers both a substantive body of rules and an array of processes by which law is created, interpreted, and enforced. This course is designed to introduce you to both the substance and process aspects of international law.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course allows the graduate students to explore topical modules spanning criminal justice, penology, sexual offenses, and offending.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This advanced course in Civil Law. It covers cases in the United States and international stages.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This is an advanced graduate course that covers researched cases on the International magnitude in the United States and the world stages.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course covers the fundamental Aviation Law and the regulators.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course is designed to analyze Business Law and Contracts in your graduate specialty.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course describes the financial institution regulations in the international markets.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This course is designed to allow the student to obtain experience in his/her specialties.

3 Credits

Course Description:

This capstone course will provide the student with the research and publish experience in the International Law markets.

Total Credits Hours

72

Disclaimer: Hebrew University and Jewish University System (JUS) reserve the right, because of changing conditions, to make modifications of any nature in academic programs and requirements of the university and its constituent colleges without advance notice. Students are advised to consult regularly with an academic advisor concerning their programs of study.

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