To earn a certificate in international and comparative law, students must complete at least three courses from the list of core courses and earn a total of 15 credits from any combination of the two lists below.
Note: Not all courses are offered every academic year. For information about current course offerings, please visit the Class Schedule page of the Office of the University Registrar website.
Core Courses
- Comparative Law
- Comparative Constitutional Law
- Foreign Relations Law of the United States
- International Business Transactions
- International Human Rights Law
- International Law
- Transnational Litigation & Arbitration
Elective Courses
- Advanced Topics in Foreign Relations Law Seminar
- Comparative Business Negotiation
- Comparative Constitutional Law Seminar
- Comparative Corporate Governance
- Comparative Law & Religion Seminar
- Conflicts of Law
- Contemporary Issues in National Security Law
- Courts as Transnational Actors Seminar
- Cross-Cultural Dispute Resolution
- European Union Law
- Foreign Affairs Law
- Immigration Law
- Immigration Law Clinic
- International Commercial Arbitration
- International Courts & Tribunals: Practice & Procedure
- International Criminal Law
- International and Domestic Business Lawyering
- International Intellectual Property Law
- International Justice & Conflict Resolution Externship
- International Law Colloquium Seminar
- International Money Laundering, Corruption & Terrorism
- International Negotiation & Diplomacy: The Case for Climate Change
- International Negotiation & Dispute Resolution
- International Tax and Finance Seminar
- International Taxation
- Investor-State Arbitration
- Latin American Legal & Judicial Systems
- Law & Practice of the United Nations
- National Security Law
- Selected Problems in Human Rights in Europe Seminar
- Select Topics in European Union Law
- Sexual Violence in Armed Conflicts
- Space Law Seminar
- U.S. Refugee and Asylum Law
- War, War Crimes, & Crimes Against Humanity Seminar