285.4 sec. 001 - Consumer Protection Law (Fall 2026)
Instructor: Ted Mermin (view instructor's teaching evaluations - degree students only)
View all teaching evaluations for this course - degree students only
Units: 3
Grading Designation: Graded
Mode of Instruction: In-Person Instruction
Meeting:
Tu 10:00 AM - 12:40 PM
Location: Law 141
From August 18, 2026
To November 17, 2026
Course End: November 17, 2026
Class Number: 33006
Enrollment info:
Enrolled: 20
Waitlisted: 9
Enroll Limit: 24
As of: 05/02 11:49 PM
The law of consumer protection governs every purchase you make, every advertisement you see, every student loan in your expanding portfolio. It may be the single most relevant body of law to your own experience and your everyday life.
Consumer rights also form the leading edge of economic justice. When predatory lenders target communities of color or scammers engage in affinity fraud within immigrant populations, the resulting losses affect not just individuals but whole communities. The work of consumer protection law is to try to prevent those losses before they happen and to remedy them if they do occur. In addition, consumer laws are increasingly being applied to redress civil rights violations, domestic and elder abuse, and climate change.
This course will explore the theoretical and historical underpinnings of consumer protection law as it has developed over the past century and as it operates (or fails to operate) today. The course will examine constitutional issues governing consumer law, from "commercial speech" to federal preemption of state law. It will provide an introduction to the substantive law of predatory lending, debt collection, and product warranties. It will explore the application of consumer law to emerging technologies. It will include at least one optional site visit. And it will do all this in just three hours each week.
(How much would you pay for this course? Wait - don't answer yet. There's more....)
With debates raging over the proper level and means of marketplace regulation, the class will examine proposed laws and rules and possibly offer some proposals of its own.
(NOW, how much would you pay?)
The low, low price: There will be two papers, one fairly short (8-10 pages) and one fairly long (15-20 pages or more).
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Requirements Satisfaction:
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Exam Notes: (P) Final Paper
(Subject to change by faculty member only through the first two weeks of instruction)
Course Category: Consumer Law & Economic Justice
This course is listed in the following sub-categories:
Public Law and Policy
Social Justice and Public Interest
If you are the instructor or their FSU, you may add a file like a syllabus or a first assignment.
Class materials may also be available on bCourses.berkeley.edu
Readers:
No reader.
Books:
Instructor has indicated that no books will be assigned.