Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
Specialised law school modules give graduates the necessary skills
New dean, new premises and £40m in the bank open up opportunities
Joint JD/MBA brings legal teaching to the topic of national security
Institutions are working with their students to give them the skills they need to find jobs, although firms still have to compete for the brightest
Commercial law has traditionally been about setting up companies rather than making business decisions, a factor that schools are looking to change, writes Della Bradshaw
Law students can enrol on a broad set of courses for a more business-orientated focus, writes Michael Tansini
The 2013 listing outlines Master of Laws degrees offered by 85 of the world’s top law schools
Breaking students’ national mindsets will broaden their legal reasoning, writes Adam Palin
LLM student Sonia Tan tells Charlotte Clarke why it is critical to have a global perspective
The Belgian student at Melbourne Law School chose Australia at least partly for the strong Asian connection
Studying overseas made Elisabet Wenzlaff think philosophically
From day one, trainees should not expect to be spoon fed, they will need to approach experienced colleagues to ask for work
Johannes Buabeng-Baidoo is a Ghanaian national who has lived in South Africa for the past 11 years and is studying at the University of Pretoria
Schools reject silo mentality of the past. By Adam Palin
The ‘i-Tutorials’ created by the college are not what you might expect from online learning
Specialised programmes are becoming increasingly popular. By Adam Palin
Legal education is increasingly embracing other disciplines
The school prides itself on the fact that students take seriously a curriculum grounded in social justice and experiential learning
International Edition