
- •Темы для устной части по английскому языку 2024–2025 гг.
- •Прокуратура (Prosecutor's Office)
- •Юридическая профессия в России (Legal profession in Russia)
- •Профессия юриста в Британии (The legal profession in Britain)
- •Юридическая система в России (The legal system of Russia)
- •Юридическая система в Великобритании (The Judicial System of Great Britain)
- •Юридическое образование в Британии (Legal education in Britain)
- •Государственное устройство Великобритании.
- •Юридическое образование в России.
- •Государственное устройство России.
Юридическое образование в Британии (Legal education in Britain)
In the UK, legal education begins with a Bachelor of Law degree, which takes 3 years to complete. To become a lawyer, a person needs to go through three stages: the first stage is academic, it implies obtaining a law degree at the university. The second stage is vocational. The third stage is on-the-job training, at this stage a person must complete an internship in law firms.
After that, a person should choose the profession of a barrister or a solicitor, since the preparation for these professions is different. A person who wants to become a lawyer must go through three stages: the first stage is academic, it implies obtaining a legal education. The second stage is vocational, it involves passing the Bar Professional Training Course at one of the Inns of Court. A third stage - this known as pupilage, is a year-long apprenticeship, usually at a set of barristers' chambers.
Similarly, a person wishing to become a lawyer must also complete 3 of the same stages: the first stage involves obtaining a law degree; the second stage requires completing a one-year Legal Practice Course; and the final stage involves working for 2 years as a trainee lawyer in a law firm or in the legal department of a local government or a large company.
You don't have to have a law degree to become a lawyer in the UK. For graduates who are not related to law, there is a one-year transfer course for obtaining a diploma of higher legal education. Then graduates undergo one-year professional training and go through all the necessary stages to become a qualified lawyer.
The Bar Council is responsible for monitoring and representing the interests of barristers, and the law Society is responsible for representing and controlling solicitors.
In the UK, the law course is called "Tripos", which is divided into "Tripos1A" (first year), "Tripos1B" (second year) and "Tripos2" (third year). During their studies at Tripos1A, students study the following subjects: Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Civil law and Civil offenses. Over the next two years, students take four mandatory one-year courses: Contract Law, Land Law. EU law and justice - two courses per year. In addition, they attend two elective courses per year on topics ranging from international law to intellectual property and family law.
The Oxford equivalent of the Cambridge Tripos1A course is the so-called "Legal Moderation Course". It covers constitutional law, criminal law and Roman law, and torts will be included as a compulsory course at a later stage. After that, the "Honour School Graduation Course" begins, which includes compulsory courses such as administrative law, contract law, jurisprudence, land law, tort, EU law and trusts. Oxford allows its students to freely choose two additional courses.
Also in the UK, you can combine special subjects with humanitarian ones. Law is more often taught in combination with subjects such as history, sociology, psychology and other humanities and social sciences. This training option provides you with more opportunities after graduation. In the UK, legal education begins with a Bachelor of Law degree, which takes 3 years to complete. To become a lawyer, a person needs to go through three stages: the first stage is academic, it implies obtaining a law degree at the university. The second stage is vocational. The third stage is on-the-job training, at this stage a person must complete an internship in law firms.
After that, a person should choose the profession of a barrister or a solicitor, since the preparation for these professions is different. A person who wants to become a lawyer must go through three stages: the first stage is academic, it implies obtaining a legal education. The second stage is vocational, it involves passing the Bar Professional Training Course at one of the Inns of Court. A third stage - this known as pupilage, is a year-long apprenticeship, usually at a set of barristers' chambers.
Similarly, a person wishing to become a lawyer must also complete 3 of the same stages: the first stage involves obtaining a law degree; the second stage requires completing a one-year Legal Practice Course; and the final stage involves working for 2 years as a trainee lawyer in a law firm or in the legal department of a local government or a large company.
You don't have to have a law degree to become a lawyer in the UK. For graduates who are not related to law, there is a one-year transfer course for obtaining a diploma of higher legal education. Then graduates undergo one-year professional training and go through all the necessary stages to become a qualified lawyer.
The Bar Council is responsible for monitoring and representing the interests of barristers, and the law Society is responsible for representing and controlling solicitors.
In the UK, the law course is called "Tripos", which is divided into "Tripos1A" (first year), "Tripos1B" (second year) and "Tripos2" (third year). During their studies at Tripos1A, students study the following subjects: Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Civil law and Civil offenses. Over the next two years, students take four mandatory one-year courses: Contract Law, Land Law. EU law and justice - two courses per year. In addition, they attend two elective courses per year on topics ranging from international law to intellectual property and family law.
The Oxford equivalent of the Cambridge Tripos1A course is the so-called "Legal Moderation Course". It covers constitutional law, criminal law and Roman law, and torts will be included as a compulsory course at a later stage. After that, the "Honour School Graduation Course" begins, which includes compulsory courses such as administrative law, contract law, jurisprudence, land law, tort, EU law and trusts. Oxford allows its students to freely choose two additional courses.
Also in the UK, you can combine special subjects with humanitarian ones. Law is more often taught in combination with subjects such as history, sociology, psychology and other humanities and social sciences. This training option provides you with more opportunities after graduation.