国际学生入学条件
Applicants who received their first law degree (JD) in the U.S. must submit an official LSAT score. International students who received their first law degree outside the U.S. are not required to take the LSAT exam. The minimum TOEFL score requirement is 250 for the computer based exam, 600 for the paper test, or 100 for the internet based exam. Two letters of recommendation are required. At least one letter should be from an academic source. You must submit transcripts for all collegiate, graduate and professional study. Applicants are required to submit an updated resume with their application.
展开 IDP—雅思考试联合主办方
雅思考试总分
6.0
了解更多
雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:6
- 托福网考总分:100
- 托福笔试总分:600
- 其他语言考试:NA
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
Anyone who expects to work as a lawyer, whether in a law firm or in-house, representing for-profit or non-profit business organizations, should have a grounding in the core business courses: Business Entity Fundamentals, Basic Federal Income Tax, Taxation of Business Entities, and Accounting for Lawyers. We've divided this kind of work into five sub-categories and suggested several courses that may be helpful for each of them. Large corporations. Law firm and in-house lawyers practicing corporate and finance law deal in almost every kind of business issue, from drafting and reviewing purchase and supply contracts, to structuring, negotiating, and drafting documents in mergers and acquisitions, to advising corporate directors on governance issues, to doing securities offerings, or organizing hedge funds. Financial Institutions. Lawyers for financial institutions may find themselves engaged in the regulation of the business, or in the documentation, administration, or workout of loans. Emerging and Small Businesses. A lawyer's business law practice may be geared to smaller or family-owned businesses, or start-up businesses, particularly those requiring venture financing. Non-Profits. Many businesses and other private sector organizations are organized as non-profit or other eleemosynary corporations. Hospitals, education institutions, cultural organizations (like museums), foundations, charitable societies, and non-governmental organizations (e.g., the American Red Cross, the American Cancer Society, Greenpeace, or Doctors Without Borders), can be large and complex, and involve legal issues much like those facing profit-based corporations. Insurance Industry. Representing insurance companies, apart from what is known as insurance defense litigation, presents particular issues of regulation and organization. The insurance industry is highly complex, and legal work can involve, among other things, traditional corporate governance work, traditional finance industry issues, drafting policy provisions, dealing with agency networks and distributions issues, negotiating and drafting reinsurance treaties, licensing and other regulatory issues, litigation with policy-holders over coverage issues, rate-making in state administrative agencies, and insurance company insolvency (which is regulated by the individual states). Helpful courses include: Insurance Law, Administrative Law, Securities Regulation, Admiralty Law.
展开