Of course - but you are going to have to go to a 4-year college (to get a Bachelor's degree) after receiving your Associate's from the community college, as law school admission requires a Bachelor's degree.
You should, of course, take a law class. If they do not have one; look for a different school.
You can start your education in a community college. As long as you obtain a bachelor's degree and get into law school it doesn't matter where you went to school.
A community can only benefit when all of its law-abiding members are accepted. Rejection hurts everyone.
One can always study law. The ability to be accepted to an accredited law school without a GED or high school diploma is very slim. Most will not accept you without a college degree.
In the UK, you can -- but in the US college is required before you are eligible to enter law school. You can! only if you pass with your really high score on your LSAT test, if you get 180 which is the highest score even Harvard University will accept you.
she was a college lecturer. then she went to law school and got her degree. then she got an opportunity form the government, in which she accepted.
Mississippi College School of Law was created in 1930.
Empire College School of Law was created in 1973.
Boston College Law School was created in 1926.
Nevada School of Law at Old College ended in 1988.
Yes. Law school comes after college which comes after high school.
The motto of Vermont Law School is 'Law for the Community and the World'.