Anonymous wrote:Wow! You folks are clueless. Yes, go to school in England for 3 years of undergraduate and then take the bar in the United States immediately. You are a lawyer after 3 years rather than 7; several American states allow this. All they care is that you have a degree in law from a common law jurisdiction.
Then go get an LLM at a relatively prestigious American law school — an easy admit compared to any JD program since a lot of the programs are just cash cows.
Anonymous wrote:Wow! You folks are clueless. Yes, go to school in England for 3 years of undergraduate and then take the bar in the United States immediately. You are a lawyer after 3 years rather than 7; several American states allow this. All they care is that you have a degree in law from a common law jurisdiction.
Then go get an LLM at a relatively prestigious American law school — an easy admit compared to any JD program since a lot of the programs are just cash cows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m dual qualified, started in the UK and then took the bar exam here. The LLB doesn’t in itself qualify you to practice law in England. Kid would need a further year of law school and then 2 years of trainee-ship in a law firm. If the end goal is practising in the US and to do a JD in the US, I don’t see any real value to it, and it might be very boring and repetitive as they would end up doing 6 years of law. If the plan is to qualify in the UK as outlined above and then move to the US and take bar, skipping the JD, that is doable but kid will find it much harder to find a job in the US because most firms only want to hire JDs. I don’t think a UK law degree on its own is of much interest to international law firms. Even being dual qualified, as I am, is of limited interest! If kid really wants to study in the UK, I suggest something other than law as undergrad.
Thanks. So the only real benefit is maybe saving one year of study costs and forgone income?
Is there any field of law (eg contract, international litigation) where qualifications from both countries is useful?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m dual qualified, started in the UK and then took the bar exam here. The LLB doesn’t in itself qualify you to practice law in England. Kid would need a further year of law school and then 2 years of trainee-ship in a law firm. If the end goal is practising in the US and to do a JD in the US, I don’t see any real value to it, and it might be very boring and repetitive as they would end up doing 6 years of law. If the plan is to qualify in the UK as outlined above and then move to the US and take bar, skipping the JD, that is doable but kid will find it much harder to find a job in the US because most firms only want to hire JDs. I don’t think a UK law degree on its own is of much interest to international law firms. Even being dual qualified, as I am, is of limited interest! If kid really wants to study in the UK, I suggest something other than law as undergrad.
Thanks. So the only real benefit is maybe saving one year of study costs and forgone income?
Is there any field of law (eg contract, international litigation) where qualifications from both countries is useful?
Anonymous wrote:I’m dual qualified, started in the UK and then took the bar exam here. The LLB doesn’t in itself qualify you to practice law in England. Kid would need a further year of law school and then 2 years of trainee-ship in a law firm. If the end goal is practising in the US and to do a JD in the US, I don’t see any real value to it, and it might be very boring and repetitive as they would end up doing 6 years of law. If the plan is to qualify in the UK as outlined above and then move to the US and take bar, skipping the JD, that is doable but kid will find it much harder to find a job in the US because most firms only want to hire JDs. I don’t think a UK law degree on its own is of much interest to international law firms. Even being dual qualified, as I am, is of limited interest! If kid really wants to study in the UK, I suggest something other than law as undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:A US attorney can apply to sit the Solicitor's Qualifying Exam. Most international firms who hire US lawyers don't tend to have them pursue solicitor qualification anyway. I've personally never seen it.