Minor in Legal Studies
The Legal Studies Program offers students the opportunity to examine broad interdisciplinary questions about the role of law and justice arising in a complex world. Courses are open to students from all majors; the only prerequisites for legal studies are the curiosity to ask critical questions and the passion to explore social change.
The Legal Studies Program is an interdepartmental program that considers challenges and perspectives that reach across most academic disciplines at Brandeis. More than 135 students minor in Legal Studies each year, making it one of the most popular majors at Brandeis. Minors must complete six courses, including two core courses, three electives, and a hands-on experience.
In the words of the famous Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, "The study of law should be introduced as part of a liberal education, to train and enrich the mind." For almost 50 years, the Legal Studies Program has taken up this challenge. Today, our mission is to advance the understanding of law by:
- developing critical and creative reasoning skills that empower students as agents of change
- analyzing legal issues that arise in diverse fields of study and integrating knowledge of social problems with strategic alternatives for action
- engaging with issues of social justice in the classroom and beyond
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Student Spotlight

For the first time in 16 years, a Brandeis student has been selected as a Truman Scholar. Daniel Block ’25 will be one of only 60 scholars selected this year from students nationwide.
“I am convinced that, like history, economics and metaphysics — and perhaps even to a greater degree than these — the law could be advantageously studied with a view to the general development of the mind.”
Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis