Most law schools in the US confer a JD. That is a doctorate of jurisprudence.
No, there are no law schools in the United States which offer online law school degrees or law school degree programs. You have to apply and attend a school in person.
One can get many different types of degrees from Northwestern Law School. One can get a JD-MBA, which stands for Juvis Bachlors degree. But one can also get a JD-PhD.
Lawyers go to graduate school in Law. Called law schools...all they give is degrees in law... Many schools have programs and even advanced degrees (after receiving your law degree) that are specialized in a field of law.
To get accepted into a law enforcement school you'd have to have degrees in law, criminology, psychology, and sociology amongst others. You can apply without these, but you most likely won't get accepted.
Schools such as the University of North Carolina, the University of Miami, the University of Detroit Mercy, New York University, and Southwestern Law School all possess immigration law degrees.
He graduated from Harvard Law School in 1991
You need to graduate university not high school to get a degree
Grad school encompasses any study after completing a bachelor's degree. Law school is one type of Grad school.
There are multiple jobs for those with law degrees. In addition to traditional work at a law firm, practicing whatever type of law you wish, you could work as a consultant for a business.
In terms of educational degrees, it stands for juris doctor (JD). This is a law degree that law students receive after completing law school.
No. Law degrees in most countries only come from law schools. You don't have to take the bar if you don't want to, but you can't practice law if you don't.
Princeton University does not have a Law School. However, many students who intend to become lawyers get their Bachelor's degrees at Princeton and then attend Law School elsewhere.