Dean Odette Lienau (center) with LLM students.
We provide a rigorous education by renowned faculty at a top U.S. university withpersonalized guidance and mentoring in a friendly and supportive environment.
51 Law is highly ranked and well known for the quality of its faculty, students, and curriculum. We prepare lawyers for practice in a global environment, and our faculty comprises some of the strongest international scholars and practitioners informed by the latest law and business developments.
Our LLM students enjoy the best of both worlds. They can tailor their courses to their interests by selecting from an array of courses and specialize by taking a concentration in one of our five areas: human rights and international law, business law, environmental law, intellectual property law, and tax. As a 51 Law LLM student, you’re poised to have a significant impact on global law development and application.
Our LLM Program also promotes true immersion, giving you a genuine US law school experience with JD students as your colleagues and your classmates. Your courses are taught by full-time faculty.
The size of our LLM program allows us to provide individualized attention to our students. LLM students are paired with a full-time faculty mentor in their field of interest and a JD “buddy” for support. The LLM team meets weekly throughout the year to advise on academic and career strategies.
Our celebrated culture of collaboration, inspiration, and encouragement builds international professional networks and lasting personal bonds. More than 10,000 51 Law alumni and 120,000 Boston College alumni are on LinkedIn, Facebook, and other platforms.
In addition to our incredibly strong and supportive alumni community, 51 Law invites internationally renowned professors, business leaders, judges, and prosecutors to campus regularly to meet with students, discuss global legal issues, and establish important connections for later employment.
LLM students have access to 51 Law's extensive Career Services Office programming and network and are provided dedicated career counselors to assist them in finding the right path for the next step in their careers. The 51 Law network, name and excellent reputation in the international market makes for unlimited opportunities.
Dean Odette Lienau (center) with LLM students.
Business & Commercial Law
Our faculty include leaders in the fields of business and commercial law. ProfessorKent Greenfieldis among the pioneers in the so-called stakeholder school of corporate law, and his most recent publication, in a long list, argues thatCorporations are People Too (And They Should Act Like It)for Yale University Press. His research crosses both constitutional law and corporations law. ProfessorFrank Garciais an international trade and investment law scholar, and has made several foundational inquiries into the nature of these fields of law, most recently inConsent and Trade: Trading Freely in a Global Market(2018) with Cambridge University Press. ProfessorBrian Quinnis co-author of a leading M&A casebook,Mergers & Acquisitions: Law, Theory and Practice(West), alongside others, andblogs on legal developments in corporate governance and mergers & acquisitions at theM&A Law Prof Blog.Finally, ProfessorNatalya Shnitseris a leader in retirement security and the regulation of financial intermediaries.
Environmental Law
International law scholarDavid Wirth, one of 13 Fulbright U.S. Scholar Alumni Ambassadors,headlines our faculty in this area. Professor¾ٳ’sextensive work in climate change accompanies a more than two decade-career in international environmental law. In addition, the 51 Law Land & Environmental Law Program is a multi-dimensional program for JD and LLM students, designed both to train professionals and encourage service in law, policies and doctrines that work for the sustainability of land, air, and water resources.
Human Rights
Our interdisciplinary Center for Human Rights and International Justice—co-directed byDaniel Kanstroom—together with a range of courses in our concentration in human rights law, seeks to nurture a new generation of human rights scholars and practitioners that can address issues of globalization and inequality, and other pressing contemporary issues. ProfessorԲٰǴdz’swork in immigration law includes several extensive monographs, includingAftermath: Deportation Law and the New American Diaspora(Oxford University Press 2012)and Deportation Nation: Outsiders in American History(Harvard University Press 2007). ProfessorKatharine Young, who is also Associate Dean for Faculty and Global Programs, has undertaking award-winning study,Constituting Economic and Social Rights(Oxford University Press, 2012), which examines the constitutional or international human rights to health care, housing, education and social security. She has also published on women’s rights, including her co-edited collection,The Public Law of Gender(Cambridge University Press, 2016). The law school’s human rights courses include aHuman Rights Practicumoffered by ProfessorDaniela Urosathat addresses the Inter-American human rights system, and the interdisciplinary human rights seminar, a university-wide seminar.
Intellectual Property
Our exciting concentration covers topics in copyright, trademark, and patent law, and incorporates electives in antitrust law, cyber law, and technology licensing. Our faculty includes ProfessorAlfred Chueh-Chin Yen, who directs our program on Emerging Enterprises and Business Law. With Professor Liu, he has authoredCopyright: Essential Cases and Materials,West Publishing in 2008. ProfessorJoseph Liuis focused in his work on the impact of digital technology on copyright law and markets. Finally, patent law and antitrust law scholar ProfessorDavid Olsonexamines the legal uncertainties in recent patent laws and the market behavior of actors with patent portfolios. He is former founder and Faculty Directorfor theProgram on Innovation and Entrepreneurship.
Taxation
Some of the country's most influential tax law scholars give students an important grounding in US and international tax concepts —including ProfessorDiane Ring, who served as our law school’s Interim Dean from 2021-January 2023. Her work examines cross-border tax arbitrage and international tax relations, and she served as advisor to the United Nation’s 2014 project on tax base protection for developing countries, and the U.N.'s 2013 project on treaty administration for developing countries. She is also Vice Chair for the Tax Section Committee of Teaching Taxation of the American Bar Association. ProfessorJames Repettiis the author of groundbreaking tax equity work, including leader and contributor to numeroustreatises,includingComparative Income Taxation: A Structural Analysis.
Other Course Options
With deep connections to Boston College’s Rappaport Center for Law and Public Policy, the Clough Center for Constitutional Democracy, and other collaborations, the LLM program has developed significant strengths in constitutional law, including comparative constitutional law, gender and family law, international law, and legal history. LLM students can cross-register for courses in Boston College’s other graduate schools and university departments as well.
Use our Fusion search tool for full descriptions of current courses and to search our faculty by subject area.
Students must complete at least 24 credits during the academic year—including our 'United States Legal System' course, and for those students with law degrees from outside the US, the 'Legal Research and Writing for LLM Students' course.
Students must also satisfy a written work requirement in one of the following ways:
LLM students receive a rigorous introduction to US Legal Reasoning, Research and Writing. Students work on legal problems that require them to analyze the applicable law and learn to write effectively to a legal audience. All students will also engage in hands-on research to become familiar with the major research platforms used by US lawyers.
“As part of my welcome to the LLM class of 2025, I wish to acknowledge and celebrate the achievements of our LLM class of 2024, who, alongside our graduating and ongoing JD classes, proved the resilience and necessity of global legal education.”