Fall 2013 Course Schedule

Govt Inform Law & Policy (LAW-700B-001)
Metcalfe

Meets: 01:30 PM - 02:50 PM (TTH) - Room 501

Enrolled: 16 / Limit: 16

Administrator Access


Notices

From time to time during the semester, this course will include the presentation of real-world FOIA problems by guest speakers from the openness-in-government community for analysis during class. The first such speaker, on Thursday September 26, will be Adina Rosenbaum, senior counsel at Public Citizen Litigation Group. The second will be Scott Amey, General Counsel of the Project On Government Oversight (POGO), on Thursday October 23.

Description

LAW-700B-001 Government Information Law and Policy (3 hrs.) An examination of the operation of the Freedom of Information Act, the Privacy Act of 1974, and related laws and policies throughout the federal government -- including matters of national security, personal privacy, and law enforcement sensitivity. The class will also explore the intractable problem area of “pseudosecrecy,” in which federal agencies have since 9/11 increasingly used document safeguarding labels such as “For Official Use Only (FOUO),” “Sensitive But Unclassified Information (SBU),” and “Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI)” to guard against information disclosure. There will be a mid-term exam and a take-home final exam, with the final grade split 35%/55% between them, plus 10% for class participation. Additionally, students in this class become eligible to meet their Upper-Level Writing Requirement with a separate paper in this subject area.

Textbooks and Other Materials

The textbook information on this page was provided by the instructor. Students should use this information when considering purchases from the AU Campus Store or other vendors. Students may check to determine if books are currently available for purchase online.

See below.

First Class Readings

For the first class, students should read the "Introduction" section of the most recent edition of the Department of Justice's "Freedom of Information Act Guide," which is available at http://www.justice.gov/oip/foia_guide09.htm. Additional readings will consist largely of Supreme Court decisions that are readily available on the Web site of WCL's Collaboration on Government Secrecy (http://www.wcl.american.edu/lawandgov/cgs/).