Criminal Justice - Semester (97165) | William S. Richardson School of Law
513
LAW
Criminal Law

Law School Description

An examination of substantive rules and rationales of the criminal law. The course begins with a survey of criminal procedure from arrest through sentencing. Study of the criminal sentencing process raises important jurisprudential questions about the purposes and efficacy of criminal sanctions as a response to officially proscribed behavior. The heart of the criminal justice course is the study of general principles of American criminal law, including culpability criteria, the mental element in crimes, and definitional ingredients of crimes such as murder, rape, attempt, and conspiracy. The focus is on the Hawai‘i Penal Code, supplemented with comparative materials drawn from the common law and from the law of several Asian nations. Consistent with overall objectives of the first year of law study, the imparting and sharpening of general legal analytical skills is emphasized throughout the criminal justice course.

UH Mānoa Catalog Description

Examination of substantive rules, enforcement procedures, and rationales of criminal law in the U.S.

Credit(s) for this CRN

4

Instructor Approval

No

Competition

No

Bar Course

Full

Clinical Requirement

No

Course required for

1L
JD

Instructor(s)

Division

Part-Time/Evening

Course Reference Number

97165
Account
Pages