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Legal Education of India

Liste der Referenzen Strippedlaw.blogspot.in Wwwlegalserviceindia.com The Hindu The Economic Times www.ijtr.nic.in www.barcouncilofindia.org The Hindustan Times Journals.iium.edu.my #Advocate T.M. Devdas, History of legal education in India, strippedlaw.blogspot.in, 14. November 2010 # Nirmal B.C., Legal Education in India: Problems and Challenges,20 IIUM L.J.,147-48 (2012). # Abhishek Aanand, Legal Education and its Challenges, www.legalservicesindia.com, 25. Juli 2014 #PTI, Law schools should bridge the gap between theory and practice: President Pranab Mukherjee, The Economic Times, Hyderabad, 2 August 2014 # C. Raj Kumar, Improving Legal Education in India, The Hindu, 27. Juni 2007 In Indien kann ein Student einen juristischen Kurs nur nach Abschluss eines Bachelor-Kurses in einer beliebigen Disziplin verfolgen. However, according to the model of the National Faculty of Law, you can study law as an integrated five-year course after passing the secondary examination. Submit your article via our online form Click here Note* we only accept original articles, we do not accept articles that have already been published on other websites. For more information, please contact: editor@legalserviceindia.com Legal historians in ancient India record cases of legal practitioners known as “litigants” or “niyogis” who represent parties in disputes, at least since the time of Manu Smriti, a person who knows the Dharma Shastra and the procedure of the law could be appointed as a representative. In ancient India, the law was understood as a branch of the Dharma. The Vedas were the original sources of law, and the Smritis proclaimed the message of the Vedas, and the Smritikars were great jurists.

Although there is no formal legal education record, jurisdiction should be conducted by the king on the basis of self-acquired training. The judiciary was also administered by the King through his appointees, who in turn were persons of known integrity and known to be fair and impartial. The guiding force for the king or his commissioner was the maintenance of the Dharma. Formal legal education in British India began in 1855 and aimed to equip law students to assist lower courts and supreme courts by registering as vakils or becoming bailiffs. There is no tradition of legal research and university legal education, and the system of teaching compulsory subjects under the lecture method has continued for almost a century. Independent India The Bar Council of India was established under Section 4 of the Lawyers Act, 1961, a statutory body regulating legal education and the profession. In 1985, the first law university in India was established in Bangalore with the name “National Law School of India University”. This was the time when the LLB degree started in India. The teaching method was also launched, supplemented by tutorials, seminars, mock trials and case law methods. And after that, legal education in India was offered by different universities and at different academic levels. With the enactment of the Lawyers Act of 1961, new regulations were enacted for the teaching of law education in India, the teaching method also required a change which was a pure lecture method with marginal provisions for student education, method of awarding degrees, etc.

In today`s world, the system has completely changed and requires a more dynamic educational structure in order to compete worldwide with innovative ideas and research in the field of law. The Bar Council of India is the current regulatory body that issues rules and regulations to promote legal education in India. Law degrees are awarded and awarded under the Lawyers Act 1961, under which the BCI is established as a statutory body and is empowered to conduct conduct both legal education and the profession itself. Universities must also be affiliated with BCI, it also prescribes curriculum rules and standards, infrastructure requirements, eligibility for admission and is responsible for promoting law studies in India. According to the rules of the BCI, Part IV, Section 4 of Chapter II, there are two study systems operating simultaneously. Traditionally, legal education has been provided in the form of a three-year (uniform) graduate diploma at the end of the bachelor`s degree introduced by BCI in 1961, and another is a five-year integrated law course (double degree) introduced by BCI in 1982 and offered under the 12th standard as an alternative over the three-year course. allowing legal candidates to enrol directly in universities. to use B.A. LL.B. B.Com LL.B, B.B.A.

LL.B, B.Sc. LL.B. This is an integrated course, which means that the bachelor`s degree is given with the law degree, in which students study the subjects of both degrees at the same time in college and end up receiving a degree that is a combination of bachelor`s degree and law.