Law School Curriculum
Law School JD degree requirements for students entering Fall 2009 include satisfactory completion of 88 semester credits, and six semesters of full-time enrollment (defined as 12 semester credits or more). First-year students are required to take a core curriculum totaling 30 credits and comprised of the following courses:Constitutional Law
Contracts
Criminal Law
Property
Torts
To see requirements for students entering in years other than 2009, visit www.law.umn.edu/current/degreerequirements.html.
In addition, all students in the Joint Degree Program in Law, Health & the Life Sciences take a professional seminar. This 1-credit Proseminar is taught cooperatively by faculty involved in the Joint Degree Program, offered on a pass-fail basis, and required each Fall semester that a student is enrolled in the Joint Degree Program.
JD/MPH in Environmental Health
The MPH program in Environmental Health is intended to prepare students for careers in environmental health. Students receive a solid technical grounding in their discipline and demonstrate proficiency in solving scientific problems through applied or basic research. The MPH degree is designed for those planning careers as practitioners or risk managers in administrative and technical positions in industry, government agencies, hospitals, or private practice.Students can pursue a general program in Environmental Health or focus on one of a number of specialty areas including Environmental Health Policy. The MPH in Environmental Health Policy requires that students take 5 public health core courses (12-14 credits) in addition to electives designated by the specialty and in consultation with the student's program advisor. Students are also expected to demonstrate familiarity with the tools of research or scholarship in the field, the ability to work independently, and the ability to present the results of their investigation effectively by completing credits for a capstone project. Students must also complete a final examination.
Specialty areas require or strongly encourage an internship depending on the experience of the student. The internship provides students with a means of gaining additional insight into the programs, personnel management, governmental relations, public relations, legislative support, and special investigations of the agencies where they work. In addition, the internship can be done in conjunction with participation in faculty research projects. The minimum number of credits necessary for graduation is dependent on the specialty chosen, but at least 30 credits are required.
Combining Curricula
Students in the Joint Degree Program combine their Law and science/health curricula by cross-counting up to 12 Law credits in their science or health program and up to 12 non-law credits in their Law School program. For more details, click on "Cross-Counting Courses" above.JD/MS or JD/PhD students are eligible for a minor in bioethics, bioinformatics, or human genetics.



