LLB
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New answer posted
9 months agoBeginner-Level 1
No campus, life, placements, internship, and friends. It is in a remote place. The worst choice if you choose it. You can ask any penultimate law student for more review. That is it! If you join after reading this then you will be a big loser.
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 10
Campus Law Centre, Delhi University offers a total of 1214 seats for its Bachelor of Legislative Law (LLB) programme. The seats are only offered to students who has a valid score in the CUET PG exam and availability of seats for each category. Further, the University follows seat reservation policy for seat distribution. More than 70% of seats are reserved for various reserved category students.
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
The questions asked in the test by Amity University for BA LLB course can vary from year to year. But based on the last year's patterns questions come from the following areas:
- English: Reading comprehension passages, grammar and vocabulary-based questions.
- Logical Reasoning: Analytical reasoning questions, critical reasoning, logical deduction and inference questions.
- General Knowledge: Current affairs, legal awareness, history, and geography
- Legal Aptitude
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
Of course, TCS offers a bunch of job options to LLB pass outs for various roles such as legal counsel, contract manager, compliance officer, and legal analyst.
If you want to apply in TCS, you can visit their official careers portal and search for open positions that require an LLB degree. All the best.
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
Yes, many companies offer jobs to fresh LLB graduates as well and not just the esperienced ones. Graduates specialised especially from Corporate Law, Compliance, Public Policy, etc., are given preferences.
Moreover, opportunities can also depend on the job market and demand for legal professionals in a particular region
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
The prominent difference in between both the pathways i.e doing LLB directly, or LLB after BCom, can be in the duration of completing the courses. While B.Com LLB is an integrated degree which combines both the degrees into one which can be completed in 5 years, and pursuing them seperately can take approximately 6 years.
New answer posted
9 months agoNew answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
If you have completed an LLB and an MBA, then it could turn out to be a good decision as you'll be a professional with knowledge and skills from both fields that could be in much demand by top corporates and organisations. It not only offers legal expertise and business skills but also leads new doors for business management, corporate law, and even entrepreneurship. you can also pick up roles where legal and business expertise is required.
New answer posted
9 months agoContributor-Level 7
To pursue LLB after 10th you need to follow these steps:
- Complete class 12th
- Prepare for Law exams like CLAT and AILET.
- Take admission in 5 year integrated LLB course.
- Also, focus on overall development like reading and moot courts.
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