2023-2024 / DROI1315-1

Multidisciplinary case study

Duration

18h Pr

Number of credits

 Bachelor in law3 crédits 

Lecturer

Aude Berthe

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the second semester

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

This course relates to the multidisciplinary examination of cases. The cases drawn from practice involve the students' legal reasoning skills and their overall legal knowledge covering several fields.

Rather than showing the extent of their knowledge, students are expected to demonstrate their ability to reason and their aptitude for detecting and presenting the comments and the issues of law and fact relevant to solving the case, in a coherent, structured and complete manner.

The precision of the comments expected from the students depends on the information and documents given to the students in support of the case.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

The course aims to initiate students, as future legal professionals, in multidisciplinary reflection, by placing the emphasis on practice. This involves encouraging them to simultaneously implement several rules from various branches of the law, and helping them to acquire the reflexes required to bring the relevant issues to the fore.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

This is a final-year course, which means students should be well versed in the subjects taught during the bachelor's degree. Students must have taken the following courses: Obligation and contract law; Extra-contractual responsibility; Economic law; Property law and notions of intellectual property; Administrative law and contentious business principles; Family law; Civil partnership law; Social law; Special contracts; Criminal procedure.

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Each lesson is divided into two parts.

Firstly, a practical case is presented either as a case study or as a file. Students are asked to prepare the case for each session. A joint summary enables students to structure the main points discussed during the course and the questions that should be raised.

Next, a legal practitioner (deputy public prosecutor, lawyer, curator, estate administrator, notary, bailiff) uses real cases to present his or her multidisciplinary practice.

 


 

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Additional information:

The course is taught face-to-face and is organised during the 2nd semester. 

Recommended or required readings

The relevant documents are available on ecampus.

Any session :

- In-person

written exam ( open-ended questions )

- Remote

written exam ( open-ended questions )

- If evaluation in "hybrid"

preferred in-person


Additional information:

Assessment is in the form of a written exam during the June session. Students have to solve a case study or case file, similar to those dealt with in class. 

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

Contacts

Contacts

Aude Berthe: aude.berthe@uliege.be

Association of one or more MOOCs

There is no MOOC associated with this course.