Probably - if they have an LLB.
LLM Communications was created in 1997.
J.D. (juris doctor) is the primary one. There is also an LLM (master of laws), which is a degree for someone who already has a law degree. This is either for a foreign attorney seeking a legal degree in the U.S., or for an area of specialty for an American lawyer (such as an LLM in tax law). There are even more advanced degrees such as the LLCM (Master of Comparative Laws) and SJD (Doctor of Juridical Science), but these are rather rare.
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.
You have to qualify in the Entrance Examination for the same.
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
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.
in subharti llm coures aprove by ugc
find the result of t.y.b.a
yes
By Shdsuper:I mean for example,one has got all the credits needed to get an LLM degree,and he has high marks of LSAT,can he apply to transfer to the JD program as a second year law school student?
189/2008D
To be a professor of law typically requires a law degree. An LLM is helpful.