2009-2010 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Albers School of Business and Economics and the School of Law
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Albers School of Business and Economics
Joseph M. Phillips, PhD, Dean
Mary Carpenter, MEd, Director, Graduate Programs
School of Law
TBD, Dean
Annette E. Clark, MD, JD, Vice Dean
Donna Claxton Deming, JD, Associate Dean for Student Affairs
Business and Law Joint Degree Program
The Seattle University business and law joint degree program is designed to allow students interested in obtaining both the JD and a graduate degree in business to complete the degrees in less time than if the two degrees were obtained independently outside the program. Full-time students are able to complete the two degrees in less time because, through the program, specified courses taken at the School of Law may count toward the graduate business degree and specified courses taken in the Albers School of Business and Economics may count toward the JD degree. The joint degree program is also available to part-time students.¹
Program of Study
The Seattle University business and law joint degree program allows students to choose either to spend their first year in the Albers School of Business and Economics or in the School of Law. Once a student chooses, the full first year must be spent in that school. The second year is spent in the other school (e.g., if the student chose law first, the second year would be in business, and vice versa). In the last two years (or more) students may take courses in both the business and law schools. The Albers School of Business and Economics operates on a quarter system and the School of Law operates on a semester system. Therefore, specific schedules must be carefully coordinated with and approved by the School of Law associate dean and the Albers director of graduate programs.
Admission Requirements for the Joint Degree Program
Students must be admitted separately to both the School of Law and the Albers School of Business and Economics, and should consult this Graduate Bulletin for the specific admissions requirements for each school. Students may be admitted to both schools before starting in the joint program; alternatively, students may seek admission to the other school during their first year of law or graduate business school. In any case, students will be expected to meet the respective school’s admissions deadlines for the coming year. Prospective applicants should note that the admissions requirements for the MBA, MSF, and MIB programs include a current résumé reflecting continuous full-time work experience in business. Work experience requirement will be waived for joint degree students who have completed the first year of law at Seattle University.
Length of Program
The minimum length of time required to complete the joint degree program is four years for full-time students. The length of time required for completion of the joint degree program will be longer if the student is part-time and/or if the student must complete fundamental business classes for the graduate business degree.
Credit Requirements
Students in the School of Law are required to complete 90 semester credits for the JD degree. The number of quarter credits required to complete the graduate business degree varies, depending upon which of the four degrees the student wishes to obtain in combination with the JD degree. In the joint degree program, students can satisfy the requirements for each degree by using a specified number of crossover credits chosen from a list of approved courses in each school. Of the 90 semester credits required for the JD degree, 12 semester credits can be satisfied by 18 quarter credits chosen from a list of specified graduate business degree courses (listed below).² Of the 55-73 quarter credits required for the MBA degree, 12 quarter credits can be satisfied by 8 semester credits chosen from a list of specified JD degree courses (listed below).³ Of the 45-63 quarter credits required for the MSF, 46-67 for the MIB, or 46-88 for the MPAC degrees, 9 quarter credits can be satisfied by 6 semester credits chosen from the list of specified law courses. Joint degree program students must complete all required courses for both the JD degree and the graduate business degree.
Additional Information
Crossover Courses for Joint Degree Program
The following courses can be used to satisfy elective credits toward the juris doctor and graduate business degrees. Not all courses are offered each quarter, semester, or year, and some courses may require particular sequencing or have prerequisites. In addition to the courses listed below, students may, upon approval, receive crossover credit for other appropriate courses that may be offered from time to time. Crossover credit will not be granted for courses that are substantially similar to courses already taken in the other school. School of Law
- Administrative Law
- Advanced Real Estate
- Antitrust
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Real Estate
- Business Entities
- Business Planning
- Client Counseling and Negotiation
- Community Development and Entrepreneurship Clinic
- Consumer Law
- Corporate Acquisitions
- Corporate and Partnership Tax
- Corporate Finance
- Corporate Governance
- Corporate Law Appellate Litigation
- Corporations, Law and Society
- Dispute Resolution
- Employment Discrimination
- Employment Law
- Environmental Law: Fundamentals
- Environmental Law-NEPA/SEPA
- Health Law I
- Individual Income Tax
- Intellectual Property
- International Business Transactions
- International Tax
- International Trade
- Labor Law: Private Sector
- Labor Law: Public Sector
- Land Use Planning
- Law and Economics Seminar
- Mediation, Advocacy, and Collaborative Law
- Not For Profit Organization Clinic
- Payment Law
- Pensions and Employee Benefits
- Products Liability
- Public International Law (formerly International Law)
- Securities Regulation
- Taxation of Charitable Organizations
- UCC Sales and Secured Transactions
Albers School of Business and Economics
NOTE:
¹ The American Bar Association, one of the accrediting agencies for law schools, requires that the JD degree be completed within a maximum of seven years.
² One quarter credit is the equivalent of .67 semester credits. A three-quarter credit crossover business course could, for example, be used to satisfy two-semester credits for the JD degree.
³ One semester credit is the equivalent of 1.5 quarter credits. A four-semester credit crossover law course could, for example, be used to satisfy six-quarter credits for the graduate business degree.
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