Recently, the Ministry of Education announced the first batch of national first-class undergraduate courses, and the course of jurisprudence was recognized as national first-class undergraduate course.
The course of jurisprudence is one of the five courses offered by Guo Bingwen's liberal arts experimental class. This course aims to introduce the basic theory of law, explore the difficult problems of legal practice, interpret social problems from the perspective of law, and cultivate the ability of rational and prudent analysis and thinking of legal issues, so as to enable students to master the basic theory of law and establish the basic principle of law based on the daily life experience and existing social knowledge of students of liberal arts and science This is the essence of jurisprudence.
The Law School of Southeast University is responsible for setting up the course of jurisprudence, with a luxurious faculty. The course is in the charge of Dean Liu Yanhong. The main professors include Zhu Suli, Xu Xianming, Ji Weidong, Zhang Weiping, Wang Yi, sun Xiaoxia, Hu Yuhong, Ma Changshan, Yang Chunfu, Liu Lianjun, Wang Jianwen, etc.
Bingwen and liberal arts experimental class is a liberal arts experimental class built by Southeast University, which integrates the essence of Liberal Arts in the whole university. Its specialties cover philosophy, literature, management, politics, economics, law and other disciplines. It is also a major reform measure for Southeast University to implement the development strategy of excellent liberal arts. Mr. Guo Bingwen, the first president of the experimental class, was named after Mr. Guo Bingwen, who is known as the father of modern Chinese University. He takes Bingwen as the educational concept, takes reasonable as the core strategy, and to become a thing of one's own as the ultimate goal It is committed to cultivating high-level talents of Humanities and Social Sciences, and shaping the future leading high-end talents with big pattern, big realm and wide vision, which meets the requirements of national first-class undergraduate courses.