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This lists of law schools is organized by world region and then country. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
Law school takes part in many international law competitions such as Ph. Jessup Moot Court International competition. In this competition, Law School of Thessaloniki in 2005 came 1st among 600 universities from all over the world (in the writing part of the competition), 5th in 2001, 4th in 2004 (in the writing part of the competition), 6th in ...
A lecture at law (2004). Besides the first professional degree in law, and various doctoral programs, the school offers a general Master of Laws (LL.M.) program for foreign-educated lawyers, a specialized LL.M. in corporate restructuring, as well as a specialized LL.M. in international law, the latter being offered exclusively at the Heidelberg Center in Santiago, Chile. [2]
Faculty of Law, Economics and Governance; Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) [1] Erasmus School of Law (ESL) Radboud University Nijmegen (RU) [1] Faculty of Law; Tilburg University (UvT) Tilburg Law School (TLS) Maastricht University (UM) Faculty of Law; University of Groningen (RUG) [1] Faculty of Law; The Open University (OU) Faculty of Law
A professional legal degree is a generalist education that offers a broad introduction to different legal fields, such as contract law, torts, family law, constitutional law, administrative law, procedural law, criminal law, European law, human rights and international law. Currently the degree requires four years of mostly mandatory subjects ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ... Law schools in Germany.
The law school is ranked within the top 25 law faculties in the world across the two major global rankings by subject (Times Higher Education and Quacquarelli Symonds). Nationally, the faculty is ranked first in the Netherlands in the Times and QS, both times followed in second place by the Faculty of Law of the University of Amsterdam.
As the only faculty of law in Norway until 1980, it traditionally educated all lawyers of Norway and remains the country's most important law faculty, educating around 75% of all new legal candidates in Norway. Its law programme is one of the most competitive programmes to get into at any Norwegian university, with an acceptance rate of 12%.