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        <title>MERLOT Search - materialType=Online%20Course&amp;category=2804</title>
        <link>http://www.merlot.org:80/merlot/</link>
        <description>A search of MERLOT materials</description>
        <copyright>Copyright 1997-2013 MERLOT. All rights reserved.</copyright>
        <pubDate>Fri, 24 May 2013 04:40:25 PDT</pubDate>
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            <title>MERLOT Search - materialType=Online%20Course&amp;category=2804</title>
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            <title>Justice with Michael Sandel</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=489097</link>
            <description>You can view the great Michael Sandel&apos;s lectures and his interaction with Harvard students as they discuss moral dilemmas. All the episodes are YouTube videos and free to watch. You can also participate in post-lecture discussions and quizzes.(Description below, copied from the homepage)Justice is one of the most popular courses in Harvard&#8217;s history. Now it&#8217;s your turn to take the same journey in moral reflection that has captivated more than 14,000 students, as Harvard opens its classroom to the world.In this twelve part series, Sandel challenges us with difficult moral dilemmas and asks our opinion about the right thing to do. He then asks us to examine our answers in the light of new scenarios. The results are often surprising, revealing that important moral questions are never black and white.This course also addresses the hot topics of our day&#8212;affirmative action, same-sex marriage, patriotism and rights&#8212;and Sandel shows us that we can revisit familiar controversies with a fresh perspective.</description>
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            <title>11.166 / 11.496 Law, Social Movements, and Public Policy: Comparative and International Experience</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554912</link>
            <description>The course introduces theoretical frameworks from legal and social movement theories as applied to court opinions, legislation, treaties, law-related articles, and policy-oriented materials and focuses on the impact of the relationship between courts and grassroots activism on current issues like trade, environmental regulation, and human rights enforcement. Students examine case studies of institutional processes including the World Trade Organization and the World Bank from key countries like the US and India.</description>
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            <title>Public Administration 2003</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554805</link>
            <description>Course HighlightsStudies on Public Administration principally focus on, What are actual administrative phenomena?, and, How can one take up the word in discussions of a certain event looking through the perspective of Public Administration?Additionally the lecture addresses and comments on the recent &#226;trinity reform package&#226; in the decentralization reform, the civil-service reform and some examples of the crisis management including disasters.</description>
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            <title>10.805J / ESD.136J Technology, Law, and the Working Environment</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=591591</link>
            <description>This course addresses the relationship between technology-related problems and the law applicable to work environment. The National Labor Relations Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, the Toxic Substances Control Act, state worker&apos;s compensation, and suits by workers in the courts are discussed in the course. Problems related to occupational health and safety, collective bargaining as a mechanism for altering technology in the workplace, job alienation, productivity, and the organization of work are also addressed. Prior courses or experience in environmental, public health, or law-related areas will be useful.</description>
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            <title>11.493 Legal Aspects of Property and Land Use</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554818</link>
            <description>This course is designed to offer an advanced introduction to key legal issues that arise in the area of property and land-use in American law, with a comparative focus on the laws of India and South Africa. The focus of the course is not on law itself, but on the policy implications of various rules, doctrines and practices which are covered in great detail. Legal rules regulating property are among the most fundamental to American, and most other, economies and societies. The main focus is on American property and land use law due to its prominence in international development policy and practice as a model, though substantial comparative legal materials are also introduced from selected non-western countries such as India and South Africa.</description>
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            <title>11.969 Workshop on Deliberative Democracy and Dispute Resolution</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555012</link>
            <description>The Workshop on Deliberative Democracy and Dispute Resolution, sponsored by the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School and The Flora and William Hewlett Foundation, is a two-day conference that brings together dispute resolution professionals and political theorists in the field of deliberative democracy.</description>
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            <title>15.628 Patents, Copyrights, and the Law of Intellectual Property</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555626</link>
            <description>This weekly seminar examines key concepts of U.S. intellectual property law, with emphasis on patents and copyrights and a briefer look at trade secrets and trademarks. Current issues relating to information technologies and business methods will be highlighted. The seminar has no prerequisites, and is designed for both graduate students and undergraduates. Half of the seats in the seminar are reserved for students from MIT departments other than Sloan.</description>
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            <title>21A.219 / 11.163J / 17.249J Law and Society</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554945</link>
            <description>Law is a common and yet distinct aspect of everyday life in modern societies. This course examines the central features of law as a social institution and as a feature of popular culture. We will explore the nature of law as a set of social systems, central actors in the systems, legal reasoning, and the relationship of the legal form and reasoning to social change. The course emphasizes the relationship between the internal logic of legal devices and economic, political and social processes. Emphasis is placed upon developing a perspective which views law as a practical resource, a mechanism for handling the widest range of unspecified social issues, problems, and conflicts, and at the same time, as a set of shared representations and aspirations. We will explore the range of experiences of law for its ministers (lawyers, judges, law enforcement agents and administrators) as well as for its supplicants (citizens, plaintiffs, defendants). We will examine how law is mobilized and deployed by professionals and ordinary citizens. We cannot cover all aspects of the legal system, nor focus on all the different actors. A set of topics has been selected to develop understanding of the situational and systemic demands within which actors in the legal system operate and perform their roles; at the same time, we will try to discover systematic patterns in the uses and consequences of law. Throughout the course there is concern for understanding what we mean by legality and the rule of law.</description>
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            <title>4.196 / 4.132 Architecture Design, Level II: Cuba Studio</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554864</link>
            <description>This architectural studio will have one main project for the semester: to explore the issues surrounding the redesign of an area in Havana, Cuba. It is a typical area about the size of a Law of Indies block that presently has a mix of housing, work, and shopping, in buildings that need to be replaced and others that need to be rehabilitated. There is also vacant land, and buildings that are unused. Part of the blocks front on the Malecon, the street next to the water. The other edge fronts onto a typical neighborhood. The intention is to study the culture through an understanding of one area of Havana and then design an &quot;echo&quot; in architectural form. The design will include public space as well as a mix of buildings: some new, some rehabilitated.</description>
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            <title>Academic Earth</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=656569</link>
            <description>Academic Earth offers free in-depth Online classes and courses from the world&apos;s leading scholars to encourage worldwide distance learning without any physical boundardies. 1500+ Video-based lectures in a variety of subjects from 30+ universities. </description>
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