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For students aiming to explore the scholarly dimensions of law through extensive research and writing, Suffolk Law provides a Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) program. Comparable to a PhD in other disciplines, the SJD represents the highest level of legal education, demanding exceptional academic achievement along with prior completion of both a JD and LLM.
Suffolk Law's SJD program is an intellectually demanding course of study that encourages students to broaden their perspectives and innovate within legal scholarship. Participants benefit from guidance by seasoned professionals and immersion in an environment of influential legal thinkers. Admission to the SJD program requires candidates to produce a comprehensive, publishable dissertation that offers novel insights to legal scholarship as a degree requirement.
Advance your legal education, develop innovative approaches, and achieve your professional ambitions in the legal field.
Over the last fifty years, environmental law has transformed from a niche specialization into a fundamental component of legal practice. It has become integral to diverse legal areas, influencing everything from government regulations to property law to major domestic and international policy decisions on global challenges.
Environmental law intersects with Energy law, which constitutes its own important and specialized practice domain. The U.S. electric power sector remains the sole regulated industry, with government agencies overseeing pricing, technology selection, and service conditions. Energy law combines aspects of regulatory compliance, environmental policy, taxation, and corporate legal practice. Following electricity market restructuring in 18 states and increased investment in smart grid technologies and sustainable energy, this field has become particularly dynamic and is recognized as a growing sector for legal careers.
Students pursuing this specialization may consider these 6 recommended courses, along with practical experience through externships, faculty-supervised independent study, or research assistant positions in the field.