Sociology of Law (318-DL-20)
Instructors
Austin Abernethy Stimpson Jenkins
Meeting Info
Online: TBA
Overview of class
Law is not just a set of rules that control behavior. Real law is also cultural. Law depends on institutions and organizations. Social forces shape the people who write, enforce, and fall before the law. In this course, students will learn how sociologists have attempted to make sense of law in its entirety, as something that real people do under the weight of history. In addition to outlining the subfield of the sociology of law and its intellectual context, this course will introduce students to comparative legal studies, legal consciousness and legal narratives, intersectionality and the law, the relationship between law and science, sociological jurisprudence, American civil rights law, and law as profession. Course materials will include texts on social and legal theory, empirical legal studies scholarship, journalistic accounts of trials, and primary legal sources. Students will be able to pick topics and readings based on their interests.
This course is conducted completely online. A technology fee will be added to tuition.
Registration Requirements
This course is limited to School of Professional Studies students only. Undergraduate students in other schools at Northwestern are not permitted to enroll in this course.
Prerequisites: none
Class Attributes
Asynchronous:Remote class-no scheduled mtg time