I am doing exactly that. I have an MBA and seven professional financial designations. I also work as a senior financial planner for the attorney general. The LLM in financial services and trust law will be very useful and will complement my management and investment background
Probably - if they have an LLB.
The general rule seems to be to do an LLM after an LLB. There exists, however, exceptions to the rule that an LLM is required before doing an LLD or Ph.D in Law, which usually entail a specific amount of work or practical exposure. Whether this exception applies and how much work experience is required, is subject to the university or tertiary institution in question.
LLB = Bachelor of Laws - Legum Baccalaureus and a Master of Laws is LLM - Legum Magister. The double LL is the plural of legis or lex.
The i-LLB Law Degree can be completed online, allowing you to earn a legal qualification whenever it is most convenient for you. LLM (Master of Laws) (Master of Laws).
LL.B is Legbum Baccalaureus or Bachelor of Legal Letters. LL.M is Legum Magister or Master of Laws
no, no one can take admission in LL.B without doing 12th. one can do integrated LL.B without doing BA or graduation. but 12th is compulsory. for more details [iimtindia.net]
Yes. In the United States, for instance, it is perfectly ordinary for individuals with foreign law degrees to seek an LLM (masters in law) in the United States in order to practice law here.
Yaa, i m looking external M. A. admission for English literatur from Pune university.
yes you can
The LPC is vocational, the LLM is academic. You MUST hold an LPC and complete a training contract with a law firm for two years in order to qualify as a solicitor in the UK.
That depends on the jurisdiction. Some places will allow you to take the bar exam without having a JD. You typically can't get an LLM without a JD.