Bar Exam in the UK or US


tac-77

Hi

I have a Master Degree of law from the University of Zurich (Switzerland). I also have an LL.M. from the same University in International Business Law.

Does anybody know if this is sufficient to take the bar exam in the US (NY) or UK (London)? (Switzerland law is a mixture between a case and codified system.)

Thanks in advance.
Chris

Hi

I have a Master Degree of law from the University of Zurich (Switzerland). I also have an LL.M. from the same University in International Business Law.

Does anybody know if this is sufficient to take the bar exam in the US (NY) or UK (London)? (Switzerland law is a mixture between a case and codified system.)

Thanks in advance.
Chris

quote
Inactive User

Chris, I'm not familar with the UK system. As per US I don't think you should have any problem with NY. I would suggest you send your transcripts to the Board of Law Examiners for evaluation asap based on your first LLM.

They alone will have the last word.

As per eligibility in other States. The comprehensive list can be found here. http://www.abanet.org/legaled/publications/compguide2005/compguide2005.html ~~~~~
Particular reference:
*http://www.abanet.org/legaled/publications/compguide2005/chart10.pdf

Each State has it's own set of rules. So make sure you conduct your own research properly. Call them if you have to.

A backdrop on how the education thingy works [In a midwest state, not NY] is the explaination given to me by a staff (at the Board of law examiners office). A typical law (JD) student has a minimum of 7 years of education. 4 years (undergrad) & 3 years of legal education (J.D~full time). I don't know if this helps or hurts your case. But I did point out to the staff, that this reasoning was faulty, because the education system differs from Country to Country and to use this scale for [all] bar applicants would be against the rules of natural justice.

Print out the above papers. You should be able to eliminate those States that you are ineligible easily.
1. You aren't admitted in Switzerland [yet] so you don't meet the 'practiced actively and substantially..... '
2. You aren't 'legally trained in [undiluted] English common law'..... The ABA refers to the English common law not codified/case law.

Go from the left to the right. Eliminate all the 'NOs' first etc. Then read the notes below .....I don't think the Certificate you've acquired is related to this process.

Just my thots!

Chris, I'm not familar with the UK system. As per US I don't think you should have any problem with NY. I would suggest you send your transcripts to the Board of Law Examiners for evaluation asap based on your first LLM.

They alone will have the last word.

As per eligibility in other States. The comprehensive list can be found here. http://www.abanet.org/legaled/publications/compguide2005/compguide2005.html ~~~~~
Particular reference:
*http://www.abanet.org/legaled/publications/compguide2005/chart10.pdf

Each State has it's own set of rules. So make sure you conduct your own research properly. Call them if you have to.

A backdrop on how the education thingy works [In a midwest state, not NY] is the explaination given to me by a staff (at the Board of law examiners office). A typical law (JD) student has a minimum of 7 years of education. 4 years (undergrad) & 3 years of legal education (J.D~full time). I don't know if this helps or hurts your case. But I did point out to the staff, that this reasoning was faulty, because the education system differs from Country to Country and to use this scale for [all] bar applicants would be against the rules of natural justice.

Print out the above papers. You should be able to eliminate those States that you are ineligible easily.
1. You aren't admitted in Switzerland [yet] so you don't meet the 'practiced actively and substantially..... '
2. You aren't 'legally trained in [undiluted] English common law'..... The ABA refers to the English common law not codified/case law.

Go from the left to the right. Eliminate all the 'NOs' first etc. Then read the notes below .....I don't think the Certificate you've acquired is related to this process.

Just my thots!
quote

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