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Rome Program

Rome today is the home of the Italian government and is the site of offices for the European Union, other international institutions, as well as private law firms, banks and corporations. Loyola's Study Abroad Program takes advantage of these facilities and institutions to introduce students to the study and practice of law in a foreign culture. It is expected that this introduction to comparative and international law will give students a deeper understanding of their own legal culture.

As the seat of power under Roman emperors, later the Papacy, and currently the capital of modern Italy, Rome displays its rich and varied history on every street and in every piazza. The Colosseum, the Pantheon, the Spanish Steps, the Trevi Fountain, the Tiber River, the Roman Forum, the Vatican - the splendors of Rome await the visitor.

Loyola Rome Center Campus: John Felice Rome Center

Loyola has operated the Rome Center of Liberal Arts since 1962. The present campus, used since 1978, is located on Monte Mario, the highest hill in present-day Rome, about twenty minutes from downtown Rome by public transportation. The landscaped campus contains classrooms, a library, student dormitories, faculty and administrative offices, a chapel, a cafeteria, recreation and exercise rooms, a coffee bar and a basketball court.

For more information about the Rome Center campus, visit the Loyola University Rome Center Website.

General Contact Information

Please direct all preliminary correspondence to:

Study Law Abroad Programs
Loyola University Chicago School of Law
25 East Pearson Street - Room 1236
Chicago, IL 60611

Program Director: Teresa Mastropieri
Email: tmastro@luc.edu  
Phone: (312) 915-8669 

Rome Center Campus
Loyola University Chicago
John Felice Rome Center
Via Massimi, 114-A
00136 Rome, Italy

Telephone: 011-39-06-355 881
Fax: 011-39-06-355 88 352
(Country code 39, City code 06) 

Emergency Cell Telephone TBD within Italy; from elsewhere in Europe add the prefix 039; from the U.S. add the prefix 011-39. 

General FAQ

Rome today is the home of the Italian government and is the site of offices for the European Union, other international institutions, as well as private law firms, banks and corporations. Loyola's Study Abroad Program takes advantage of these facilities and institutions to introduce students to the study and practice of law in a foreign culture. It is expected that this introduction to comparative and international law will give students a deeper understanding of their own legal culture.

As the seat of power under Roman emperors, later the Papacy, and currently the capital of modern Italy, Rome displays its rich and varied history on every street and in every piazza. The Colosseum, the Pantheon, the Spanish Steps, the Trevi Fountain, the Tiber River, the Roman Forum, the Vatican - the splendors of Rome await the visitor.

Loyola Rome Center Campus: John Felice Rome Center

Loyola has operated the Rome Center of Liberal Arts since 1962. The present campus, used since 1978, is located on Monte Mario, the highest hill in present-day Rome, about twenty minutes from downtown Rome by public transportation. The landscaped campus contains classrooms, a library, student dormitories, faculty and administrative offices, a chapel, a cafeteria, recreation and exercise rooms, a coffee bar and a basketball court.

For more information about the Rome Center campus, visit the Loyola University Rome Center Website.

General Contact Information

Please direct all preliminary correspondence to:

Study Law Abroad Programs
Loyola University Chicago School of Law
25 East Pearson Street - Room 1236
Chicago, IL 60611

Program Director: Teresa Mastropieri
Email: tmastro@luc.edu  
Phone: (312) 915-8669 

Rome Center Campus
Loyola University Chicago
John Felice Rome Center
Via Massimi, 114-A
00136 Rome, Italy

Telephone: 011-39-06-355 881
Fax: 011-39-06-355 88 352
(Country code 39, City code 06) 

Emergency Cell Telephone TBD within Italy; from elsewhere in Europe add the prefix 039; from the U.S. add the prefix 011-39.