Course Criteria

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  • 1.00 - 6.00 Credits

    Description: Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of training and practice in actual service in a technical, business, or governmental establishment. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P F. May be repeated: an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions. Usually offered: Fall, Spring.
  • 1.00 - 12.00 Credits

    Description: Working experience at the Arizona State Legislature; responsibilities draw upon student's area of major expertise and include preparing written and oral reports, summarizing legislative proposals, and providing information to legislators and legislative committees. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P F. May be repeated: an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions. Usually offered: Fall, Spring.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Description: The development and exchange of scholarly information, usually in a small group setting. The scope of work shall consist of research by course registrants, with the exchange of the results of such research through discussion, reports, and/or papers. Grading: Regular or alternative grades can be awarded for this course: A B C D E or S P C D E. May be repeated: for a total of 6 units of credit. Usually offered: Fall, Spring.
  • 1.00 - 6.00 Credits

    Description: Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work. Graduate students doing independent work which cannot be classified as actual research will register for credit under course number 599, 699, or 799. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P F. May be repeated: an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions. Usually offered: Fall, Spring, Summer.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Description: This course provides an overview of the legal (and non-legal) regimes that govern the acquisition and control of natural resources, using economic analysis as the principle analytical framework. The course examines the history of the federal public domain, including statehood grants, homestead acts, and the creation of national forests, national parks, national wildlife refuges, and the Bureau of Land Management system. The course provides an introduction to the common law and federal statutory control of specific resources including water, wildlife including endangered species, hard rock minerals, oil and gas, marine fisheries, and public lands dominated by recreational and/or preservation uses. Grading: Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Identical to: LAW 660; LAW is home department. Usually offered: Spring.
  • 1.00 - 8.00 Credits

    Description: Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of training and practice in actual service in a technical, business, or governmental establishment. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P F. Usually offered: Fall, Spring.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Description: The Economics, Law and Environment workshop (ELE Workshop) is intended to expose students and participating faculty members to a broad range of original research in the area of overlap between law, economics and environmental issues. The workshop will consist of six meetings during which leading scholars in the field will present their research for discussion and critique by the enrolled students and participating faculty. The workshop is part of the broader Program on Economics, Law and the Environment, a research and educational collaboration between the College of Law and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Grading: Regular grades are awarded for this course: A B C D E. Identical to: LAW 697S; LAW is home department. Usually offered: Spring.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Description: Qualified students working on an individual basis with professors who have agreed to supervise such work. Graduate students doing independent work which cannot be classified as actual research will register for credit under course number 599, 699, or 799. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P F. May be repeated: an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions. Usually offered: Fall, Spring, Summer.
  • 1.00 - 8.00 Credits

    Description: Individual research, not related to thesis or dissertation preparation, by graduate students. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P C D E K. May be repeated: an unlimited number of times, consult your department for details and possible restrictions. Usually offered: Fall, Spring, Summer.
  • 1.00 - 8.00 Credits

    Description: Individual study or special project or formal report thereof submitted in lieu of thesis for certain master's degrees. Grading: Alternative grades are awarded for this course: S P E K. Usually offered: Fall, Spring, Summer.
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