General Overview
A combined degree in law (JD) and planning (MRP) is offered in
an arrangement between the Regional Planning Program and the School
of Law at Western New England College (WNEC) in Springfield. The
combined degree in law and planning provides the following advantages:
- Both degrees can be completed in four years instead of the
usual five.
- Professional status can be obtained in two fields.
- A practice specialization is established.
- A network of contacts in both law and planning is obtained.
Holders of such degrees are employed in a wide variety of occupations
in both public and private sectors. According to a combined planning/law
degree program at another institution, the University of California
at Berkeley, its past graduates “have found an impressive
variety of professional opportunities available to them.”
The purpose of the combined law/planning degree program is to
provide a professional education of greater breadth than would
otherwise be available for students interested in urban, land
use, housing, or social policy problems. The planning curriculum
offers students training in policy analysis and exposure to theories
and programs that address urban development problems. Legal training
provides additional analytic skills and substantive knowledge
necessary for successful plan and program implementation. Education
in planning offers an overview of theories and methods that permit
identification and treatment of societal problems. Education in
law offers insight into the institutional causes and possibilities
for treatment of these problems.
Graduates of a combined degree program are qualified for a number
of professional roles at the intersection of law and planning.
These include municipal attorneys, staff personnel on legislative
committees, economic development administrators, planning directors,
consultant planners, advisors to private clients on land use matters,
staff members of governmental agencies, public interest advocates,
and executive assistants to mayors, governors, and department
heads.
Admission
Applicants to the combined program must apply to and be admitted
separately by the School of Law and the Regional Planning Program,
prior to acceptance into the combined program. Admission to this
program is limited to students who have applied simultaneously
to both units or who are already completing their first year of
law or planning study. Applicants must meet the separate admission
requirements of each institution, including satisfactory performance
on the GRE for admission to Planning and satisfactory performance
on the LSAT to the law school.
Duration and Residency
The combined JD/MRP allows students to obtain the two degrees
in four years rather than the five years it would take if pursued
separately. Students will pursue course work at the two institutions
consecutively rather than concurrently.
Students must spend their entire first year in either the Planning
Program or the School of Law. The second year is normally spent
full-time in the program not chosen the first year. Thereafter,
the student will finish the degree requirements by spending entire
semesters at either institution to complete remaining credits.
After the first two years the student has three additional semesters
(with 12-16 course credits per semester) to complete at the School
of Law and 12 semester credits to complete in Planning. Put another
way, after two years, the student will have one semester’s
work to complete in Planning, and three semesters (1 1/2 years)
to complete in Law.
Curriculum and Cross-Credits
The successful completion of the combined program (and the awarding
of the law and the planning degrees) requires the student to complete
the core courses and mandatory academic requirements at each institution.
In meeting these requirements, the combined program requires that
each institution grant credit for one semester’s academic
work (what is now indicated as twelve course credits by both institutions)
at the other institution. Thus for Planning’s 48 credit
program, 36 credits will be taken in the Regional Planning Program
(including required courses and a Master’s thesis or project),
with law courses constituting the remaining 12 credits (cross-credits)
for the MRP degree. The 12 law credits are in essence the electives
allowed in the planning curriculum. At the Law School, the student
must still earn the 88 credits required to obtain the JD degree,
but 12 of those credits will be earned through the successful
completion of courses at the Regional Planning Program.
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