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Prospective Student Information Session

You are cordially invited to attend a VIRTUAL Prospective Student Information Session via Zoom with the Thomas Jefferson School of Law Admissions Department. Applicants with at least an Associate Degree and an LSAT score are welcome to apply. Information Sessions are tailored for students who are either waiting for an admissions decision, or have not yet applied. Join our info sessions to learn more about the law school admissions process and get your questions answered. To RSVP for a Virtual Information Session via Zoom, please select a convenient date from the list below.

Students who have already been admitted, should RSVP for an Admitted Student Open House.

For additional assistance, you also may email admissions@tjsl.edu 

We look forward to chatting you!


Register 

*Click the link to register in advance for an event. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
 

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Legal Writing I Workbook - Plagiarism Policy Statement

PLAGIARISM AND UNAUTHORIZED ASSISTANCE

You will be violating the ethical standards of Thomas Jefferson School of Law if you do either of the following:

1. turn in any work, graded or ungraded, that is plagiarized; or

2. give or receive any unauthorized assistance.

I. PLAGIARISM

Plagiarism is defined as follows:

Plagiarism is a violation of the ethical standards of Thomas Jefferson School of Law. According to Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, plagiarism is (1) "to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own" or (2) to "use (a created production) without crediting the source." All written assignments in this class must be the product of your own research, analysis, writing, and editing. You must not steal and pass off as your own the work of any other person. You will, of course, use cases and statutes as authority for your analysis. You must credit those sources.

Obviously, copying another student's paper is plagiarism because it is stealing and passing off the ideas and words of another person as your own ideas and words. Another obvious example of plagiarism is to use ideas or words or both from a statute, case, or other authority without crediting the source.

You must use a citation to the source for both precise quotations and paraphrases. Whenever you use the precise wording of a statute, case, or other authority, use quotation marks around the words quoted and credit the source. When you paraphrase a statute, case, or other authority, credit the source. Changing one or two words within a sentence written by another does not eliminate the need to use quotation marks or the need to provide a citation. Err on the side of giving credit.

A. PRIMARY AUTHORITY

Consider the following ways that a student might use this excerpt from a case.

SOURCE:

[T]he fireman's rule is based on a principle as fundamental to our law today as it was centuries ago. The principle is not unique to landowner cases but is applicable to our entire system of justice--one who has knowingly and voluntarily confronted a hazard cannot recover for injuries sustained thereby. We have consistently applied this concept in our recent pronouncements in other cases of basic tort doctrine. The principle denying recovery to those voluntarily undertaking the hazard causing injury is fundamental in a number of doctrines, including nullification of the duty of care, satisfaction of the duty to warn because the hazard is known, contributory negligence, and assumption of risk, as well as in the fireman's rule. It is unnecessary to attempt to separate the legal theories or to catalog their limitations. The rule finds its clearest application in situations like that before us--a person who, fully aware of the hazard created by the defendant's negligence, voluntarily confronts the risk for compensation.

Walters v. Sloan, 20 Cal. 3d 199, 204 (1977).

VERSION A APPEARING IN STUDENT'S PAPER:

The fireman's rule is based on a fundamental principle, a principle that is not unique to landowner cases but applies to our entire system of justice: One who has knowingly and voluntarily confronted a hazard cannot recover for injuries sustained in confronting the hazard. Courts have consistently applied this concept. The principle has been used to nullify the duty of care and to satisfy the duty to warn because the hazard is known. It also has been used in the doctrines of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and the fireman's rule. The rule finds its clearest application in situations where a person who, fully aware of the hazard created by the defendant's negligence, voluntarily confronts the risk for compensation.

QUESTION: Is version A plagiarism?

COMMENT: Clearly plagiarism. Although the ideas conveyed may not be unique to Walters, the stolen phrases are. It makes no difference that some parts of the case are paraphrased and some parts are precisely quoted. Both paraphrases and precise quotations should be followed by citations.

QUESTION: Does the interweaving of the writer's own words with the source's words render the writer innocent of plagiarism?

COMMENT: No. Using some of the writer's words simply makes portions of Version A a paraphrase; both the precise quotations and the paraphrases should be attributed to their source.

VERSION B APPEARING IN STUDENT'S PAPER:

The fireman's rule is based on a fundamental principle that is not unique to landowner cases but applies to the entire system of justice. As the court in Walters v. Sloan, 20 Cal. 3d 199 (1977) points out, someone who has knowingly and voluntarily confronted a hazard cannot recover for injuries sustained in confronting the hazard. Courts have consistently applied this concept. The principle has been used to nullify the duty of care and to satisfy the duty to warn because the hazard is known as well as in the doctrines of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and the fireman's rule. The rule finds its clearest application in situations where a person who, fully aware of the hazard created by the defendant's negligence, voluntarily confronts the risk for compensation.

QUESTION: Now the source is cited. Is version B plagiarism?

COMMENT: Still plagiarism. The correct citation of Walters does not excuse the failure to cite the case in other parts of the passage where the writer has taken some of the court's words and ideas and presented them as the writer's.

VERSION C APPEARING IN STUDENT'S PAPER:

Many California courts have precluded recovery by plaintiffs who were injured by a risk that the plaintiff knew about and disregarded. See, e.g., Walters v. Sloan, 20 Cal. 3d 199, 204 (1977). This principle has been used to nullify the duty of care and to satisfy the duty to warn because the hazard is known as well as to justify the defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. Id. "The rule finds its clearest application in situations where a person who, fully aware of the hazard created by the defendant's negligence, voluntarily confronts the risk for compensation." Id.

QUESTION: Is Version C plagiarism?

COMMENT: No plagiarism. The writer's conclusion has been influenced by the Walters opinion, but the writer has not tried to pass off the court's conclusion as the writer's conclusion. The source for each sentence is properly acknowledged.

B. SECONDARY AUTHORITY AND DOCUMENTS ACCESSED THROUGH ELECTRONIC SOURCES

The same rules of attribution apply to secondary sources such as law review articles. What some students fail to realize is that these rules apply with equal force to both primary and secondary sources that are accessed electronically, such as documents found on websites and on Westlaw and Lexis. This principle runs counter to common notions of cyberspace as being a domain where information flows freely and belongs to all. Nonetheless, whenever you quote directly from or paraphrase the words of another author, you must cite to that author's work, whether that work appears in print or online. In other words, you may not cut and paste material found in an online document unless you quote and cite the source correctly.

When citing to primary or secondary authority that appears both in print and online, you generally should cite the print source because it is more permanent. For primary authority (mostly cases) that appears only online, proper citation formats are set forth in Rules 12.12 and 12.15 of the ALWD Citation Manual. The ALWD Citation Manual also provides proper citation formats for secondary sources that appear only online. Particular attention should be paid to Chapters 38, 39, and 40, which cover proper citation formats for documents accessed through electronic sources. For example, citation formats for sources on the World Wide Web almost always include the full Uniform Resource Locator (URL) of the document cited.

EXAMPLE: Sierra Club, Stop Sprawl: Transportation Issues, http://www.sierraclub.org/sprawl/transportation/ (accessed June 6, 2002).

II. UNAUTHORIZED ASSISTANCE

Giving or receiving unauthorized assistance also is an ethical violation. Students often are unclear about what constitutes "unauthorized" assistance. The rule for your legal writing classes is simple: All assignments in this class must be the product of your own research, analysis, writing, and editing.

Students MAY NOT receive assistance on their graded assignments from any person working in the Thomas Jefferson Writing Center. This prohibition includes, but is not limited to, assistance with analysis, organization, grammar, spelling, research or citation format for any outline, draft or final version of any document that will be graded. If you are referred to the Writing Center for tutoring in any of these areas, you may only work on problems or exercises that will not be evaluated as part of your course grade.

The following examples are offered to help students determine what assistance they may not ethically give or receive.

A. ANALYSIS, WRITING, AND EDITING:

All analysis, writing, and editing must be your own. "Analysis" includes thinking, evaluating, and concluding. "Writing and editing" includes outlining, drafting, revising, editing, and proofreading. Although you may discuss your written assignments with others, the analysis that is reflected in every step of your writing process must be your own. No other person may have any part in writing and editing your papers, including proofreading.

The only person who may review your written work for analysis, organization, and writing is your professor. Unless you are given specific instructions by your professor, you may not share any of your written work with another student. You may not ask for or obtain another person's work on similar law school assignments unless such papers have been placed on library reserve or are within sources to which the public has access. You may not give your written work to another person for review until the course is completed or until your professor has placed on library reserve sample answers for that particular assignment.

If you do not type your own papers, your typist must be instructed to type your papers exactly as written or dictated. If your typist is your secretary and is accustomed to correcting your grammar, spelling, and punctuation, your typist should be instructed NOT to make corrections for your law school papers.

You may use software to check your spelling and grammar. You may use your papers as writing samples for job applications.

QUESTION: A student says, "Jenny and I discussed the issue of negligence per se, and we disagree about whether the statute was intended to include the conduct of the defendant. Is it OK if our papers come to different conclusions?" Have the students committed an ethical violation?

COMMENT: No. An ethical violation would have been committed, however, if one student simply took the conclusion of another student and used that in the first student's written work rather than doing independent analysis.

QUESTION: A student says, "I sent this draft to my brother-in-law Mort, an attorney, and he read it over. He says my analysis is brilliant and I deserve a higher grade." Has the student committed an ethical violation?

COMMENT: Yes. The student has committed an ethical violation by receiving unauthorized assistance. Mort has given the student substantive commentary on an assignment before the course was completed.

QUESTION: Another student says, "Boy, I'm going to yell at my husband. Look at all the typos he missed." Has the student committed an ethical violation?

COMMENT: Yes. The student has committed an ethical violation by having someone else proofread her paper.

B. RESEARCH:

All research done for this course must be your own work. Unless you are given specific instructions by your professor, you may not share the results of your research with another student. You may not ask for or obtain the results of another person's research.

You may discuss the research process with your fellow students, and you may ask librarians, library assistants, or teaching assistants such questions as where particular library resources are located and how to use those resources. You may not ask them to find the answers to specific legal questions or to find specific cases or statutes for you.

The above descriptions are examples only; they are not a full list of all instances of plagiarism or unauthorized assistance. If you are ever unsure whether something constitutes unauthorized assistance or plagiarism, ask your professor before engaging in the behavior. It would be better NOT to engage in behavior which might be acceptable than to engage in behavior which is NOT acceptable.

Download Plagiarism Policy

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Upper Level Writing Requirement

In the second and third years, students complete an upper level writing requirement. This requirement allows students to develop advanced lawyering skills in a field that is of particular interest. The requirement may be satisfied by taking a doctrinal seminar course or a professional skills course, by working on a Moot Court brief or law review note, or by completing an independent study project.

In addition, students may further develop their lawyering skills by taking an advanced legal research course or a course designed to improve rhetorical skills such as Law and Literature or Appellate Advocacy.

Advanced Property Topics

Appellate Advocacy

Bioethics

Copyright Law

Entertainment Law

International Intellectual Property

Law & Literature

Sexuality, Gender & the Law

Women & International Human Rights Law

World Trade Organization Law

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Because the legal writing faculty at Thomas Jefferson includes teachers who have become expert in a number of fields through their practice, their teaching, and their scholarship, they are especially qualified to help students begin to construct a foundation for their own practice of law.

Leah Christensen, who practiced medical malpractice and school law, focuses her scholarship on cognition, goal orientation and legal reading. She also writes in the area of education law.

Ilene Durst, who has extensive litigation and immigration law experience, focuses her scholarship on language and narrative theory and their applications to advocacy, immigration, and literary representations of the legal culture.

Linda Keller, who served as a Fellow at the University of Miami Center for the Study of Human Rights, publishes in the area of international human rights and criminal law.

Sandy Rierson, formerly a partner practicing intellectual property law with Quinn Emanuel Urquhart Oliver & Hedges, pursues scholarship in legal history and women's history, intellectual property, and civil procedure.

Jeff Slattery draws on his years in the music business and his experience as a practitioner in art and entertainment law to study the protection of cultural property.

Priscilla Vargas Wrosh has practice experience in the areas of corporate restructuring and securities fraud litigation.

Amy Day, who worked in political communications prior to attending law school, has experience in corporate litigation and family law.

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Nice, France

Thomas Jefferson’s study abroad program is open to TJSL students, who are in good academic standing and have completed at least one semester of residential classes. The study abroad program provides in-depth study of specific issues in international and comparative and law.

Thomas Jefferson School of Law, in cooperation with the La Faculté de Droit de l'Université de Nice presents Summer Study Abroad Program in Nice, France. Students may earn 4 summer credits in 3 weeks while studying on the French Riviera. The courses have an international focus and compare American and European approaches to law. Classes are held mornings only and are taught in English. 

 

 

Where: France: French Riviera, Nice

When: Summer

Curriculum Highlights: The courses are International Human Rights; Comparative Antitrust Law; International Sports Law; and International Business Transactions. Classes are in the morning, Monday through Friday and taught in English.

Overview: The Thomas Jefferson Law Nice Program runs from Monday, May 16, 2022 and ends on Friday, June 3, 2022.  On-campus summer classes begins Monday, June 6th.

Setting Description: The University of Nice School of Law offers an ideal environment for learning international and comparative law in a city that is both beautiful and rich in European culture and history.

Program Value: The Nice Program is designed to encourage students to experience international law in an international setting, to exchange ideas with students from a different land, and to explore cultural differences that influence international business and legal transactions. All eligible students are encouraged to apply for this unforgettable experience.

Program Cost: Tuition $4,400.00

Application Deadline: February 11, 2022

Subjects: International Studies, Legal Studies

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Externship Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Externship program offers great opportunities for hands-on legal experience and academic credit at the same time. In fact, our externship program is ranked 18th in the nation based on the ratio of externships the school has placed and the number of full-time students. For total enrollment based on full-time and part-time students, Thomas Jefferson is 5th in the nation. These rankings are based on data from the Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools, 2013 edition. In all, 441 Thomas Jefferson students, representing 61 percent of the student body, participated in externships in 2012.

Placement opportunities are plentiful and varied, ranging from traditional settings such as the United States Attorney’s Office to local biotech corporations to international settings like The Hague. We have externship placement opportunities in law firms of all sizes and practice areas and a number of opportunities at nonprofit, issue-focused organizations.

Students who have successfully completed the Evidence course, or are concurrently enrolled, can become certified law clerks and, thus, be able to make court appearances. Externships provide students an opportunity to develop and hone their research and writing skills. They also work closely with practicing attorneys, and have interactions with clients.

Externship areas of practice include civil litigation, corporate transactions, criminal prosecutions, criminal defense, tax, estate planning, immigration, family law, intellectual property and child welfare and custody.

Students also attend Externship classes and receive individual mentoring.

The Judicial Externship Program

Students participating in the Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Judicial Externship Program have a unique opportunity to work in a judge’s chamber during their law school careers. Students can earn academic credit as they work for a Federal or California State Court Judge.

Students participate in judicial seminars, receive individual mentoring, have the opportunity to research, write and advise the court on a wide variety of legal issues, and observe courtroom proceedings. Students often have the chance to draft judicial opinions and to play a very special role within the judges’ chambers.

Thomas Jefferson students have been placed with federal judges, justices from the California Court of Appeal, the State Superior Court, the Probate Court, and the Family Court.

For more information on externships, students should contact the Externship and Pro Bono Programs Office.

Judybeth Tropp, Esq. jtropp@tjsl.edu, Director of Externships and Pro Bono Programs

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The Pro Bono Honors Program gives student the opportunity to work with underserved populations both in traditional and non-traditional legal settings. Projects and non-profit organizations are in need of law students to help meet their missions. These projects enable law students to gain valuable experience, as well as serve a vital function within the community. All lawyers should be committed to using their unique education and skills to help these underserved populations.

This program is designed for Thomas Jefferson School of Law students to encourage community-based volunteer legal service projects.  The program offers students an opportunity to become involved in the community, enhance their law school experience, and build practical legal skills.

TJSL partners with non-profit organizations, law firms, the San Diego County Bar Association, dozens of legal agencies and other interested entities to accomplish this goal.  We desire to cultivate communal involvement within our own TJSL community by engaging faculty, administration, staff and alumni in our efforts to work within our own region.

These opportunities allow any student who devotes at least 50 hours (not for credit or compensation) of volunteer legal service, specifically to underserved populations, to qualify for TJSL’s Pro Bono Honors Program.  Students receiving Pro Bono Honors will obtain an honors certificate and an honors cord that can be worn at graduation that reflects their commitment to the community.

You may work towards your 50 hours of Pro Bono service throughout you tenure as a law student at TJSL.  You do not have to complete all 50 hours with a single employer.

What type of work is acceptable for the purposes of this program?

  • Work directly related to the delivery of legal services to under-resourced individuals by attorneys of organizations (e. g.  Legal Aid Society, San Diego Volunteer Lawyer Program);
  • Work for an attorney or attorneys on behalf of non-profit organizations, donations to which qualify as deductions under state or federal tax laws (e. g.  San Diego Coastkeeper, environmental Health Coalition, National Wildlife Federation);
  • Work for federal, state, or local government agencies that provide legal services to low-income individuals (e. g.  Public Defender’s Office, Family Law Facilitator);
  • Work for pre-approved student-initiated projects (e. g.  TJSL Clinics, Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, holocaust litigation, death penalty appeals, etc. )

For more information, please contact the Director of Externships and Pro Bono Programs: Judybeth Tropp, Esq. jtropp@tjsl.edu

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Mediation is a growing industry within the legal profession and Thomas Jefferson School of Law is a community leader in immersing students in the art of conflict resolution. Students receive intensive training in mediation and then have the opportunity to gain experience working with real clients and cases in an actual courtroom setting.

Thomas Jefferson has partnered with the San Diego Small Claims Court to create a clinical opportunity that allows students to see "up close and personal" the benefits of alternative approaches to dispute resolution. As mediators in the Small Claims Mediation Program, the students apply the communication, listening and facilitation skills they have acquired in class to assist clients in settling their cases.

More advanced students may be selected to serve in other programs, including the Probate Court Mediation Program, which mediates cases involving guardianships and conservatorships. Following referrals from the Probate Court, participants in this program mediate cases right on the TJSL campus.

The Mediation Program helps students envision novel approaches in which attorneys can help clients move beyond their disputes in creative, constructive and immensely satisfying ways.

Interested students are afforded the opportunity to work with Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR) mentors so they can learn from lawyers who work in the mediation field.

The Mediation Program is under the direction of Professor Ellen Waldman.

For more information about TJSL’s Mediation Program, please contact us at mediation@tjsl.edu.

Mediation Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law

701 B St. Suite 1150

San Diego, CA 92101

Phone: 619.961.4368

Fax: 619.961.1368

Directions to TJSL

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Principles learned in the classroom applied to working actively with the community
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To understand the theory of law, practice it. Thomas Jefferson School of Law has in-house law clinics for students to work with community members seeking pro bono work on a small scale. Meeting with people seeking answers to legal challenges is one of the best ways to apply what you learn in the classroom to real-life scenarios, whether working on family or veteran issues or interning at local law office or public interest organization. This is one way to find out what segment of the law interests you. Many of these programs allow you to earn academic credit. Students can choose from clinics offering services to veterans, small business entrepreneurs, and those seeking professional mediation. 

Externship Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Externship program offers great opportunities to earn hands-on legal experience and academic credit at the same time. 

Placement opportunities are plentiful and varied, ranging from traditional settings such as the United States Attorney’s Office and the Public Defender to the special opportunities offered by San Diego's local biotech corporations. We have externship placement opportunities in law firms of all sizes and practice areas and a number of opportunities at nonprofit, issue-focused organizations.

Students who have successfully completed or are enrolled in Evidence and Civil Procedure can become certified law clerks and, thus, be able to make court appearances. Externships provide students an opportunity to develop and hone their research and writing skills. They also work closely with practicing attorneys, and have interactions with clients.

Externship areas of practice include civil litigation, corporate transactions, criminal prosecutions, criminal defense, tax, estate planning, immigration, family law, intellectual property and child welfare and custody.

Students also attend Externship classes and receive individual mentoring.

The Judicial Externship Program

Students participating in the Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Judicial Externship Program have a unique opportunity to work in a judge’s chamber during their law school careers. Students can earn academic credit as they work for a Federal or California State Court Judge.

Students participate in judicial seminars, receive individual mentoring, have the opportunity to research, write and advise the court on a wide variety of legal issues, and observe courtroom proceedings. Students often have the chance to draft judicial opinions and to play a very special role within the judges’ chambers.

Thomas Jefferson students have been placed with federal judges, justices from the California Court of Appeal, the State Superior Court, the Probate Court, and the Family Court.

For more information on externships, students should contact the Director of the Externship and Pro Bono Programs, Professor Judybeth Tropp, jtropp@tjsl.edu.

Mediation Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law is a community leader in immersing students in the art of conflict resolution. Students receive intensive training in mediation and then have the opportunity to gain experience working with real clients and cases in an actual courtroom setting.

Pro Bono Program

The Pro Bono Honors Program encourages community-based volunteer legal services projects working with underserved populations both in traditional and non-traditional legal settings.

Small Claims Self-Help Workshop

The Small Claims Self-Help Workshop provides free limited legal assistance for low- to moderate-income individuals and businesses with small claim issues.

Tax Clinic

The student-led Tax Law Society operates the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program of the IRS each spring and offers free income tax return preparation.

Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic

The Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic provides limited legal assistance, as well as full service legal representation, to the residents and alumni of Veterans Village of San Diego, a successful, residential program that provides housing, substance abuse, mental health, and job training services to formerly homeless veterans.

Small Business Law Center

The Small Business Law Center supports community economic development in San Diego County by assisting entrepreneurs, artists, inventors, small businesses and non-profit organizations that do not have the financial means to hire an attorney. The Center includes:

  1. Nonprofit + Business Law Clinic
  2. Patent Clinic
  3. Trademark Clinic The patent and trademark clinics are certified by the United States Patent and Trademark Office
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The Juris Doctor program at Thomas Jefferson School of Law offers a rich variety of courses, concentration areas and clinical programs in addition to our special Academic Centers, which have their own certificate programs.

Our academic programs are designed to train you to be an attorney but also to offer you career-enhancing experiences that will enrich your professional and personal life.

While earning your J.D., you can get actual hands-on courtroom experience, work with real clients, perform pro bono and community-service work, participate in amazingly varied externships, study law overseas and travel the country with our competition teams.

Experiential Learning Programs

The law school provides a wealth of experiential learning opportunities, so that you can get real-life experience before you graduate.  Our clinics include the Mediation Clinic, Tax Clinic, Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic, and Small Business Law Center.  Our students also work with experienced attorneys and organizations thorugh our robust Externship Program, and serve the community through our Pro Bono lawyering program.  

Legal Writing

Our legal writing program is highly-ranked and one of the first in the nation to be taught primarily by tenure and tenure-track professors.

Criminal Law, IP, Entertainment & Sports Law Fellowship Programs

Thomas Jefferson School of Law offers exciting, enriching fellowship programs for students interested in Criminal Law, Intellectual Property (IP), Entertainment & Sports Law.

Academic Specialties

Thomas Jefferson's faculty have diverse interests and practice backgrounds, supporting the Law School's diverse academic specialities.  For example, students may specialize in Criminal Law, Intellectual Property Law, Entertainment and Sports Law, Legal Practice, Mediation, or International Law.

Study Abroad / Exchange Programs

One of the most exciting opportunities at Thomas Jefferson School of Law is the option to participate in our Study Abroad programs. Thomas Jefferson has recently offered summer study programs in Hangzhou, China (Summer 2019) and Nice, France (Summer 2020), as well as exchange opportunities with law schools in Europe and Canada.

 

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