It depends where you are. For example, in Scotland, you may study to be a lawyer through univeristy studies, or by interning and then challening exams. In North America however, you need an undergraduate degree before being admitted into a Law program, which is another degree itself. In other places such as England and Australia, the law degree is taken at the undergraduate level.
No. In fact, most law schools in the US prefer that you not major in anything like "legal studies" or "criminal justice" if your plan is to go to law school. They'd rather you major in an academic subject, like English, History, Physics, Engineering, etc. Your choice what you major in, entirely your choice. Law schools don't care what you picked, so long as you did well in it.
In the United States a Bachelor's degree is normally acquired before applying to law school. There are law schools that don't require it, but they may not be accredited.
same thing
You need a bachelor's degree. preferably a bachelor's that prepares you for law school such as a bachelor's in criminal justice, political science, sociology, or English.
To be a lawyer you need to get a Bachelor's Degree, and then you need to go to law school and get a law degree.
Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.Typically, you need a bachelor's degree (fours years), and three years of law school.
In the United States and Canada (and most British Commonwealth countries) you need to have completed a Bachelor's Degree for admittance to most law schools.In some countries you don't need a bachelor's degree for admittance to law school.
You need a bachelor's college degree (pre-law) and then law school.
You will need a bachelor's degree. The type does not make a difference.
Yes, law school applicants must have a bachelor's degree to qualify for admission. Thus, it is four years of undergraduate coursework and three years of law school the obtain a juris doctor (JD) degree.
The Boston University Law School is a graduate program conferring the LLD degree, a doctoral degree. It has not offered a Bachelor's Degree program for many decades. A Bachelor's degree is required to enter the Law School.
You need to get into law school first. So that means you need a bachelor's degree. Usually political science, history, criminal justice, and sociology are good places to start. Focus on passing in high school and staying on-track through your bachelor's degree. You have plenty of time to worry about classes for law school when working on your pre-law bachelor's.
The degree you need is a juris doctor (JD) degree. This would take four years for the bachelor's degree and four years of law school. You will also have to pass the designated bar-exam to practice law.
A bachelor's degree in any field and a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from an accredited law school.
No a master's degree is not required. You need a bachelor's degree for most schools.