It varies by school, but typically a 1L's schedule includes Torts, Contracts, Property, Civil Procedure, and Legal Writing.
First year law students are, in most law schools, required to take Criminal Law, Contracts, Property, Torts, Civil Procedure and Constitutional Law, as well as one or two optional subjects. Most second and third year subjects are optional.
While not strictly speaking a prerequisite, most law schools in Canada and the US teach a fairly standard set of subjects in first year (contracts, criminal law, property, torts, civil procedure, constitutional law). Beyond that, no prerequisite is required for an introductory environmental law course.
There are no prerequisite subjects required for admission to law school.
First year Law student.
It's probably best to stick with academic subjects. I'm going into year 12 now and i have chosen History, Sociology, Maths and English literature and Language and i want to proceed to do law at university. i want to be a barrister :D
There are no prerequisite subjects for law. Excellent grades and a high LSAT score are essential.
constitution
Law school is a three year curriculum. A first year law student is a 'one L'. A second year law student is a 'two L', while a third year law student is a 'three L'. The L stands for Law.
1867
1799
It was the first codified Roman law in 449 BC. However, the first Ten Laws preceded the complete set of twelve by about a year.
Yes but in a very limited fashion. In Texas, the bar association makes all 1 first year full-time law student an affidavit, acknowledging that can work no more than 20 hours a week. From a first year law student perspective, and considering the heavy work load law school imposes, in addition to the relentless pressure to outdo your classmates, I would not recommend working during your first year in law school.