Admission to the bar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about requirements for admission to practice law not just terminology. Most countries listed have additional requirements.

Admission to the bar is the term commonly used in the United States to indicate that a person is licensed to practice law as an attorney at law. Different terms for admission are used in other countries.

Contents

[edit] Commonwealth countries (general)

Main article: Call to the bar

[edit] Australia

  • A Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) or a Juris Doctor degree
  • A year's practical training in a law firm, known as an Articled Clerkship, or an equivalent practical course
  • Written and spoken fluency in English

[edit] Canada

[edit] England and Wales

[edit] New Zealand

  • A Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) degree
  • Professional legal studies course
  • Written and spoken fluency in English
  • Aged at least 20
  • Having passed a university paper in Legal Ethics (if having completed your LL.B degree after 2000).

[edit] Republic of Ireland

[edit] Singapore

[edit] Hong Kong

[edit] United States of America