Curriculum
Business and transactional law courses fall within two general categories:
- Core Courses
- Advanced Courses
All students interested in business and transactional law should try to take all of the Core Courses. Students with a specific area of interest should choose advanced courses in that area. Other students should choose broadly to help develop an interest in a particular area. Students should talk regularly with faculty members and business and transactional law professionals about their course of study to help fashion the best possible class schedule.
Core Courses
- Business Associations
- Commercial Drafting
- Contracts I
- Contracts II
- Law and Accounting
- Negotiation
- Taxation of Individual Income
Advanced Courses
- Advanced Oil and Gas Law
- Antitrust
- Arbitration
- Art Law
- Bankruptcy Court Externship
- Business Concepts for Lawyers
- Corporate Finance
- Debtor/Creditor Relations
- Decedents' Estates
- Employee Benefits Law
- Employment Discrimination
- Energy Regulation
- Entertainment Law
- Health Care Law
- Insurance
- Intellectual Property
- International Business Transactions
- Law and Economics
- Oil and Gas Law
- Payment Systems
- Patent Law
- Real Estate Transactions
- Secured Transactions
- Securities Regulation
- Sports and the Law
- Structured Externship
- Tax Policy Seminar
- Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders
- Taxation of Gratuitous Transfers
- Taxation of Partnerships and Partners
- Telecommunications Law
- Trusts and Future Interests
- Water Rights
- Workers' Compensation
- Writing for Law Practice



