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UCLA launches LL.M. in the law and sexuality

By Karen Sloan Contact All Articles 

The National Law Journal

November 29, 2012

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UCLA School of Law's Lara Stemple

UCLA School of Law's Lara Stemple

The University of California at Los Angeles School of Law has announced plans to offer an LL.M. in Law and Sexuality — the first of its kind at a U.S. law school, according to administrators. The program will focus on preparing students to practice and perform scholarship in gender-identity and sexual-orientation law.

"As law and policy on LGBT issues continue to unfold in our courts and legislatures, this program will provide young lawyers with the tools they need to engage in this dynamic and rapidly changing area of law," director of graduate studies Lara Stemple said. Few programs in the United States or abroad center on sexuality and the law, she added.

Law schools have been adding master of laws programs and specializations in recent years, partly in response to declining interest in the traditional juris doctor curriculum and falling tuition revenues. Some school have added or expanded LL.M. programs geared toward foreign-trained lawyers. Others have added them in specialized areas for J.D.-holders from the United States. St. John's University School of Law this year launched an LL.M. in International and Comparative Sports Law and George Washington University Law School announced plans for a program in health care policy, for example.

UCLA's LL.M. in Law and Sexuality will be open to U.S. and foreign-trained lawyers and will dovetail with the school's highly regarded Williams Institute. That think tank conducts research into sexual-orientation and gender-identity law as it affects the military, public health, immigration, state recognition of same-sex marriage and additional factors. Executive director Brad Sears said both the institute and students would benefit from the new, nine-month LL.M. program.

"With recent projects in Latin America, Africa, the Balkans and South Asia, the Williams Institutes' work is increasingly international," he said. "Students in the new program will gain experience and exposure by working with the institute, and they will greatly enhance our work."

In addition to working on institute projects, the LL.M. students will take classes and participate in a workshop centered on sexuality and the law. They also must complete an extensive writing project.

Applicants must complete an admissions process separate from the school's general LL.M. program.

Karen Sloan can be contacted at ksloan@alm.com.



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Reader Comments

  • California Boy on the East Coast

    December 01, 2012 09:51 AM

    Bravo! It sounds like UCLA has figured out a way to offset the decline in JD/LLM applicants by making their law program even more sexy.

    I'm curious though if any research has been done to see how many law firms are willing to pay LL.M. salaries for what is essentially a two unit course "sexed up" as an LL.M.?

    And when these newly minted LL.M.s can't afford to pay their student loans because no one is hiring sex lawyers are these masters of sex law going to start filing even more frivolous sex discrimination suits to make ends meet?

    God I would hate to be a straight man in Hollywood who tells my transgender friend that her bag doesn't match her shoes and end up before Judge Judy on a gender discrimination claim.

    And they wonder why the rest of the country thinks California is the land of fruits and nuts...

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