« What should we make of all the (not-always-so?) innovative grading changes? | Main | An innovative legal magazine ... which some law schools might emulate? »
December 16, 2008
Is anyone teaching a post-Heller seminar on the Second Amendment?
As regular readers on my home blog know, I find the debate and litigation surrounding the Second Amendment after Heller to be fascinating (and also incomplete and stunted in various ways). For this reason and others, I have been lately toying with the notion of developing a upper-level law school seminar on the law, policy and practice of the Second Amendment after Heller.
Before getting serious about a potential new teaching project, however, I thought it might be useful to inquire whether anyone else has been working on such a seminar or course. (I have heard varying reports about the Second Amendment becoming a more prominent topic in constitutional law classes in various law school, but I have not heard about a class or seminar devoted just to the Second Amendment after Heller.)
In addition to seeking information about whether anyone is now teaching or developing a post-Heller Second Amendment course, I would also welcome general comments from practitioners and others about whether they think such a course would be a valuable addition to a law school curriculum.
Posted by DAB. Cross posted at Sentencing Law and Policy.
December 16, 2008 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c8ccf53ef0105368012a1970c
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Is anyone teaching a post-Heller seminar on the Second Amendment?:
Comments
I taught this seminar at Chapm,an Law School in Orange Cal last semester and am scheduilled to teach it again. dean John eastman and I wrote a textbook for other schools to use in the process of developing the class. Chuck michel 562 216 4441
Posted by: C.D. | Dec 18, 2008 11:28:55 AM
Recent Comments