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What do you like/dislike about LLM-Guide?

  • Hannes Diedrich
    Sep 29 2007, 12:57 PM
    As you may know, I have (co-)developed the LLM-Guide website. If you have any ideas on how to improve the LLM-Guide, I would greatly appreciate if you could post a comment in this thread.

    BTW: If you have any comments on lawyrs.net, please join the Beta Group at www.lawyrs.net/groups/7/beta !

  • Pastor Trimor, Jr.
    Jan 31 2008, 05:57 AM
    LLM-Guide gives us a bird's eye view of the other LLM courses being offered worldwide. However, in our jurisdiction, the Philippines, I have not found the LLM program of the University of the Philippines (UP) listed in this site especially their LLM- Global Legal Studies chaired by Prof. Harry Roque. So, I suggest, that LLM-Guide Administrator and Staff invite the University of the Philippines to post their LLM programs for everybody's convenience.

  • Hannes Diedrich
    Jan 31 2008, 05:53 PM
    Thanks for the feedback! I checked the website http://law.upd.edu.ph/acadinfo.html - it seems the program is not offered anymore ([*Admission to the Master of Law (LL.M.) Program has been suspended indefinitely]. Do you know more about that?

    [Edited Jan 31 2008]


  • Deleted User
    Jan 31 2008, 07:43 PM
    hey,

    I'm from Canada and attend university of Sherbrooke, we have a couple of llm's offered but none are documented on the site. I am currently doing an llm in transnational and common law there, and it's great. It's actually documented as a graduate degree than can be converted to LLM if you write a thesis, or procede to an internship in an international organisation

  • Hannes Diedrich
    Feb 02 2008, 09:52 PM
    Hi Jon. As the Sherbrooke website is available in French only, I could not find anything about the llm in transnational and common law. Do you happen to know the URL where you can find more information? I had a look at http://www.usherbrooke.ca/programmes/maitrise/droit.html, but this does not look like a postgraduate degree(?).

  • Deleted User
    Feb 02 2008, 10:04 PM
    i went to the link, and it a post graduate degree. Maitrise en droit means, masters in law. Also the designation is wrtten a couple of lines under. It is written LLM. There is two possible LLM in sherbrooke. The first being; transnational an common law, which is a 36 credits of course and an essai (like a thesesis but slightly shorter) for 9 credits, thus makinga total of 45 credits. the second LLM is just one for general law and consists a written thesis. So in short the link you had is the right one, and pretty muc sums up the two possible LLM in sherbrooke.

    thanks.

  • Pastor Trimor, Jr.
    Feb 03 2008, 02:29 AM
    Hannes, I agree with you. It appears that the University of the Philippines - LLM Program had been suspended indefinitely.


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