LLM
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New answer posted
7 years ago
Beginner-Level 5
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7 years agoNew answer posted
7 years agoBeginner-Level 4
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7 years agoBeginner-Level 4
NLSIU, Bangalore
NALSAR, Hyderabad
NUJS, Kolkata
NLU, Jodhpur
GNLU, Gandhinagar
You have to appear for the CLAT PG exam to get admission in LLM courses in the NLUs.
New answer posted
7 years agoBeginner-Level 3
New answer posted
7 years ago
Contributor-Level 7
According to their official website, there are only two courses that they offer that is BALLB and LLB and I have checked their website right now.
Even if they offer LLM you should prefer Tamil Nadu Dr. Ambedkar Law University because the fee is very nominal in Ambedkar Law College.
Secondly, you have variety of courses for LLM there and you can choose whatever you want.
There are nine departments. Yes, that's correct- nine departments such as department of business law, department of criminal law, administrative law, environmental law, constitutional law and a lot more.
Tamil Nadu's Ambedkar Law
New answer posted
7 years agoBeginner-Level 5
Here, you need to clear your thoughts. LL.B. course has honours papers with it. There you need to study two extra papers for special study. But LL.M. that is Masters in Law is itself a specialised course. There you can't have honours papers. So my friend LL.M. (Hons.) can not be a course. It can be only LL.M. specialised in either in Business Law, Constitutional Law, Criminology and Penology, etc.
New answer posted
7 years agoContributor-Level 8
Both M.Phil in Law and LLM are Master's degree in law. They are pursued after completing the Bachelors in law either a 3-year course or a 5-year nature. The points of difference between the two are the nature of the course as well as time taken to complete it.
Prior to the change of rules by Bar Council of India, it took two years to complete LLM. But now, it just takes a year to complete LLM. MPhil, on the other hand, takes more time than a year.
LLM has a fixed curriculum that is taught in the universities I.e. there are mandatory subjects that are to be studied under the program. M Phil, on the other hand, is independent. It pro
New answer posted
7 years agoContributor-Level 8
The major difference between the two courses is the nature of the degree, the time taken to complete the course and eligibility criteria to pursue either LLM or Ph.D in law.
Recently, the Bar Council of India has reduced the time of LLM from two years to one year. So, now it takes just one year to complete LLM. Ph.D on the other hand generally does not have a fixed time limit. It normally takes around 2-3 years to complete Ph.D.
While LLM is a Master's degree in law, Ph.D is a doctoral degree. Once you complete your Ph.D, you can use Dr. as a prefix to your name.
Coming to the eligibility part for completing LLM, you require a Bache
New answer posted
7 years agoContributor-Level 8
M Phil is a postgraduate research degree. Instead of having a fixed curriculum to be taught, it is basically an independent project that an individual does on his own. Although you generally work under the supervisor, there is generally no time bound restrictions with respect to thesis submission and assessments. The eligibility of M.Phil degree may be based on the university from
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