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Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law
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Joint JD/MBA Degree Admissions Menu
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PURPOSE

The School of Law and the College of Business and Economics offer a coordinated degree program leading to the conferral of the J.D. and M.B.A. The purpose of this joint program is to allow the student to study the intricacies of modern law and management as a coordinated educational effort. Students who are contemplating a career as a lawyer specializing in business issues and want to acquire the skills and perspective of the business manager will find the J.D./M.B.A. especially helpful. An additional benefit of the J.D./M.B.A. program is that if offers the student the ability to complete the J.D. and M.B.A. in considerably less time than required to complete each degree separately.

ADMISSION

A potential student must make separate application to, and be independently accepted to, both the J.D. and M.B.A. programs. Application to both programs at the same time is encouraged. This joint program is designed for students who wish to complete both degrees simultaneously.

BENEFITS

The School of Law will award credit toward the M.B.A. degree for nine hours of approved Core Knowledge and Skills course work with a grade of B or better from the M.B.A. program. Grades in these business courses transfer to the School of Law on a Pass/No Grade basis. Grades in M.B.A. courses are not used to determine academic standing or class rank in the School of Law.

The College of Business and Economics will award credit toward the M.B.A. degree for nine credit hours from approved courses offered by the School of Law. The student must earn a C+ or better on the law classes used for the M.B.A. concentration. The law classes will not be used toward computing the M.B.A. grade point average; however, no more than two C's may count toward the M.B.A. section of the joint degree program. These nine credit hours count for the six hours of electives in the program plus three credit hours satisfying the international course requirement in the M.B.A.

ELECTIVES

Law courses used for the six hours of M.B.A. electives must be from electives in the law curriculum. These concentration courses may not be part of the required course sequence for the J.D. degree. The following law courses may count toward the M.B.A. As new advanced electives that relate to business are developed for the law curriculum, they will be added to this list. If any course from this list is added to the required course sequence in the law degree curriculum, it will be deleted from this list of courses:

Administrative Law (311) Fair Employment Practice Law (330)
Antitrust (318) Federal Taxation of Business (334)
Arbitration/Labor (315) Franchising Law Seminar (422)
Banking Law (385) Labor Law (343)
Bankruptcy Reorganization Seminar (442) Land Use Planning (344)
Business Organizations II (319) Non-Profit Organizations (370)
Commercial Paper (323) Problems in Bankruptcy (354)
Corporate Finance (384) Partnership Tax (352)
Debtor-Creditor Relations (327) Realty Transactions (358)
Employment & Labor Law Seminar (443) Sales (359)
Environmental Law (328) Securities Regulations (361)
Environmental Law Seminar (438) Unfair Trade Practices (366)

The international component of the M.B.A. may be satisfied by an international law course chosen from the following list of international courses from the School of Law:

Comparative Law (373) International Finance (338)
Comparative Law Seminar (441) International Law (340)'
Immigration Law (337) Transnational Legal Problems (365)

PROGRAM SEQUENCE

Students in the joint J.D./M.B.A. program may schedule their course work in the joint program to suit their education objectives, subject to the restrictions listed below:

  • A student may take only law courses while completing the first-year law curriculum.

  • A law student must begin the M.B.A. program course work before beginning the third year of law school course work. An M.B.A. student must begin law school before completing one half of the course work in the M.B.A. program.

  • A J.D./M.B.A. student who did not complete the business common body of knowledge course work (Essential Foundation) before entering the joint program must finish the Essential Foundations requirements of the M.B.A. program before beginning Core Knowledge and Skills.

  • A student may not register for more than fifteen credit hours concurrently in the two program, without joint permission of the Dean of the School of Law and the Faculty Director of the Master's Programs in the College of Business and Economics. Additional restrictions that apply to graduate assistants or other employment shall be determined and enforced by each college.

For further information concerning the two programs, please contact the program coordinators:

Dr. Sue Ann McClellan Dr. Gregory W. Boller
Assistant Dean of Admissions Associate Professor of Marketing
MBA Program Director, Graduate Programs
Room 203, Law School Room 101E, Fogleman College of Business
901-678-5403 901-678-3698
smcclell@memphis.edu gboller@memphis.edu
www.memphis.edu/law www.fcbe.memphis.edu

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