• LAW 7125

    Practical Trust and Estate Administration
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.48

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course covers advanced and applied topics in estate planning and probate, wealth management, trust and estate administration, and trust, estate, and fiduciary litigation. The course focuses on the role of an attorney as executor or trustee, and the role of an attorney in advising executors, trustees, and beneficiaries.

  • LAW 7135

    Law and Economics
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.51

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    The economic analysis of law has generated foundational insights and a handful of Nobel prizes. It guides many scholars, judges, practitioners, and policy-makers, and it provides one of the major theoretical perspectives on the study of law. This course introduces the topic.

  • LAW 7140

    History of American Federalism
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.53

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course will explore the theoretical foundations of federalism at the time of the American founding and trace its development over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

  • LAW 7145

    Rules
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.43

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    In this course, students will learn to read, interpret, draft, aggregate, manipulate, and improve rules embodied in contracts, statutes, treaties, constitutions, customs, sports, and games. We will write, and explore the implications of, rules in assignments involving individual work, small-group work, and class discussion. Grade depends on exercises and short papers undertaken throughout the semester.

  • LAW 7176

    Introduction to American Law for LLMs
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.32

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course introduces LLM candidates who have received their law degrees from foreign universities to certain structural and historic aspects of the U.S. legal system.

  • LAW 7187

    Law of Public-Private Partnerships
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.44

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course focuses on the legal topics and skills required to successfully negotiate and document a public private partnership for a real estate transaction.

  • LAW 7196

    Repugnant Transactions
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.45

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This class examines exchanges and transactions that are traditionally repugnant, and sometimes illegal. Importantly, what constitutes a repugnant transaction is culturally dependent, changing over time and across cultures. For example, typical repugnant transactions in modern western societies include organs, blood, babies, sexual relations, votes for money, and a wide range of other issues.

  • LAW 7197

    Taboo Trades
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.46

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    "This class will explore the topic of taboo trades (e.g. prostitution, marijuana, paying college athletes) through the production of a weekly podcast in with a guest scholar, lawyer, or regulator. Students will read relevant work of the guest and develop questions and content for the podcast. Two students will be ""guest producers"" for each podcast and take the lead in selecting questions and materials, and help conduct the interviews."

  • LAW 7203

    Law and Artificial Intelligence
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.57

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Artificial Intelligence (AI) has begun to have profound effects on law and society. Topics will include: algorithmic bias, AI and privacy, tort liability for self-driving cars, autonomous weapon systems and the laws of war, and legal person-hood for artificial intelligences. Introductory classes will include a primer on the present and future of AI technology.

  • LAW 7205

    Second Amendment and Gun Violence Colloquium
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    UVA has initiated a "The Gun Violence Solutions Project" which seeks to harness the intellectual assets of the entire University to develop innovative and effective solutions that will both curb gun violence and pass constitutional scrutiny. This class is designed to be one part of the University's overarching commitment to finding new constitutional methods to decrease gun violence.