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Slovakia in Europe
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Class Outline
Class Outline
The American Litigation Practice
By Stanley W. Parry, Attorney at Law
I. Introduction
A. Professor is Stanley W. Parry
B. This class is about American Litigation Practice
1. Civil Procedure
2. Criminal Procedure
3. Trials and Rules of Evidence
II. The American Legal Process
A. What is law
B. Civil Law Tradition
C. Anglo-American Development of Common Law
1. Introduction
2. History of American law
3. Judicial Review
Marbury vs. Madison (Facts, Issues, Decision)
Gore vs. Bush (Facts, Issues, Decision)
4. Sources of American law
5. Case law
6. Judicial Function
7. The Jury system
8. The Court System
D. Federal Courts
E. U S Supreme Court
F. State Courts
III. The Study of Law in the U. S.
A. Law School
B. The Case method
C. The Socratic method
D. The IRAC reasoning: Issue-Rule-Application and Conclusion
IV. The Practice of law in the U. S.
A. The Bar
B. Judges
C. Academics
D. The Practice of Civil law
E. Criminal Defense
F. Attorneys in Government
V. Litigation Practice
A. Civil Rules of Procedure
Federal and State Courts – Separate but similar Rules of Procedure
B. Criminal Procedure
Federal and State Courts – Separate but similar Rules of Procedure
C. Trials and Rules of Evidence
D. Appeals
E. Practice Activity (Moot Court Practice)
The American Litigation Practice
By Stanley W. Parry, Attorney at Law
I. Introduction
A. Professor is Stanley W. Parry
B. This class is about American Litigation Practice
1. Civil Procedure
2. Criminal Procedure
3. Trials and Rules of Evidence
II. The American Legal Process
A. What is law
B. Civil Law Tradition
C. Anglo-American Development of Common Law
1. Introduction
2. History of American law
3. Judicial Review
Marbury vs. Madison (Facts, Issues, Decision)
Gore vs. Bush (Facts, Issues, Decision)
4. Sources of American law
5. Case law
6. Judicial Function
7. The Jury system
8. The Court System
D. Federal Courts
E. U S Supreme Court
F. State Courts
III. The Study of Law in the U. S.
A. Law School
B. The Case method
C. The Socratic method
D. The IRAC reasoning: Issue-Rule-Application and Conclusion
IV. The Practice of law in the U. S.
A. The Bar
B. Judges
C. Academics
D. The Practice of Civil law
E. Criminal Defense
F. Attorneys in Government
V. Litigation Practice
A. Civil Rules of Procedure
Federal and State Courts – Separate but similar Rules of Procedure
B. Criminal Procedure
Federal and State Courts – Separate but similar Rules of Procedure
C. Trials and Rules of Evidence
D. Appeals
E. Practice Activity (Moot Court Practice)
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Outlines for the Federal and State Systems
I have posted links to descriptions of the United States Federal and State Systems. They will help understand the systems and compare them.
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