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It also permitted me the opportunity to teach the introduction to the
U.S. legal system both the well trained non-U.S. lawyers and to do it in
Spanish over a short but intense course.
I
am grateful to both institutions, and their respective leaderships, for
helping to make this possible. A big shout out to my teaching
assistants, Isa Ferrera Baca and Brandon Ruggiero, both of Penn State
University, for their excellent work in putting together the materials,
and especially for their organization of the program exercises and the
English-Spanish vocabulary.
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This post includes the PowerPoints for our second session--which introduced students to the cultures, ideologies and expressions of common law. Particular attention is paid to common law as a set of substantive law field, as a method of judging, and as a method of approaching the relationship between law and the courts.
Part 1 (Introduction) may be accessed here.
Part 2 (Common Law) may be accessed here.
Part 3 (Equity) may be accessed here.
Part 4 (Statutes) may be accessed here.
Part 5 (Administrative Regulations) may be accessed here.
Part 6 (Ideologies and Practice of Statutory Interpretation) may be accessed here.
Part 7 (Judicial Review and Constitutional Interpretation) may be accessed here.
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