PhD in Law

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  • Опубліковано 18 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 95

  • @Learnlawbetter
    @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +14

    Why do you want to earn an advanced law degree? What do you hope to accomplish with it?

    • @vinsukakannangara5389
      @vinsukakannangara5389 4 роки тому +4

      I want to teach others like you Prof. Biaz.

    • @mrfahrenheit8417
      @mrfahrenheit8417 4 роки тому +5

      Make fat stacks hoo rah

    • @sufy3677
      @sufy3677 4 роки тому +7

      In my country we don't ask this question because we don't have to pay anything to get a degree , all degrees are free , from bachelor to PhD. That's why i studied law, philosophy and journalist

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +5

      But there is the opportunity cost: you spent time earning more degrees when you could have done something else. In other words, you have to factor in your time as well.

    • @mrfahrenheit8417
      @mrfahrenheit8417 4 роки тому +1

      @@sufy3677 Collecting degrees may leave one feeling fulfilled, but what about all the things you could have done? Out of the countless things out there, why did you choose to pursue more and more areas of study?

  • @emmadiez4637
    @emmadiez4637 4 роки тому +25

    I am currently a law student fiinishing my LLB (I study in Spain), I want to pursue a PhD in law since my ultimate goal is to be a professor. Ideally I would like to teach in the US (I had the opportunity to study one semester at Cornell Law School and fell in love with how law school is taught in the US) but I am flexible. After getting my PhD in law in Spain I would like to do an LLM in the US and a JSD there too. I know it sounds like a lot but to be honest life in academia writing papers sounds like the most wonderful thing to me. Thank you for the video!

  • @aciuschristophores7789
    @aciuschristophores7789 2 роки тому +3

    How fantastically explained in a most logical, organised, lucid way. Easiest subscription choice of my life ! Way to go, Captain! :P

  • @bwoodward9564
    @bwoodward9564 4 роки тому +3

    ' Viva Frie' has excellent insight to legal thinking.

  • @daryl_Jem
    @daryl_Jem 4 роки тому +3

    Excellent video. Quick note: in Canada, a bachelor's degree is not required to get into Law school. Only 2 years of undergraduate study.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      Thank you. This is similar to law schools accredited by the State of California. Glad to have learned something new.

    • @MrChippinator
      @MrChippinator 3 роки тому +1

      Having graduated from a Canadian law school, I think I only ever came across 2 people who didn't finish their bachelors. So although technically true, it is extremely rare.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому

      Thanks. In the US, law schools can waive the bachelors degree, but I’ve never seen it done. Well, one time, but in that case the student only had one more undergraduate course to go and the law school allowed him to take that one course during his first semester of law school.

  • @Aelena_verse
    @Aelena_verse 4 роки тому +3

    I already love your videos and find them so helpful, but those Studio C clips made my day!

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +2

      My kids started watching Studio C years ago-usually very funny.

  • @starbury64
    @starbury64 4 роки тому +4

    Awesome video on the attorney doctoral degrees. Can yo do a video on your perspective on legal apprenticeship and diploma privilege? I personally don't like the ideas, but a man of your erudition can enlighten others outside the legal world.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      Let me think about these topics-they might be useful. Thanks for the suggestions.

  • @gamdarockitboi6632
    @gamdarockitboi6632 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent vid Professor. I am graduating this May and found the topic very informative. Thanks again for a solid foundation.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      Congratulations! Hope you do well in the next step in your path.

  • @steppenwolf6605
    @steppenwolf6605 4 роки тому +4

    So i am here to say thank you for being so kind and doing this hard work👌

  • @VictoriaSobocki
    @VictoriaSobocki 4 роки тому +2

    Great video! Well structured and with good humor. Thanks for sharing it!

  • @aalegalfocus
    @aalegalfocus 4 роки тому +1

    Imho those extra degrees are mostly useless, unless the person is hoping to become a law prof and needs to publish law review articles. Getting yet another degree from a poorly ranked school isn't going to help most people.

  • @asamatteroflaw570
    @asamatteroflaw570 Рік тому

    Wonderful video! Great historical content and practical career advice! I’m trying to trade up to Ivy for some of the reasons you mentioned.

  • @British_loyalist
    @British_loyalist 2 роки тому

    Thank you for playing Rule Britannia!

  • @taissamyra5021
    @taissamyra5021 3 роки тому +6

    Hello professor, I am currently in 11th grade in high school and I plan on becoming a law professor. However, I don’t really have mentors or anyone that has knowledge about law school. My plan is majoring in education, then getting a masters in law and later getting a juris doctor degree. Although i’m not quite sure if this is a great pathway on becoming a law professor. I would greatly appreciate it if you gave me some advice, in a few months I will be applying for college and i’m still unsure with what programs I should be taking. Thank you!

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому +5

      Don’t know where you live, but I suspect the path is similar. First, get into an elite college-in education the credential matters. Next, you need top grades so you can get into an elite law school-the nation’s best. Again, need to graduate at or near the top of the class. In the US, once in law school you also need to join law review and a judicial clerkship after graduation. Must begin writing academic papers right after law school graduation.

  • @progrocker84
    @progrocker84 11 місяців тому

    Your closing section was very interesting. Do you know of any cross-disciplinary scholars working at the intersection of law and music (not IP), where a PhD in music has been helpful?

  • @expandifypro
    @expandifypro 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you, professor!

  • @sarweenabdulla6243
    @sarweenabdulla6243 Рік тому

    I currently study PhD in criminolgy but why you did not mention about this??

  • @VietLe-ht5mk
    @VietLe-ht5mk 4 роки тому +2

    How do I get accepted to a PhD degree in an American university? Having many published ISI articles would do?

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +1

      Admissions will vary between programs. Each school will accept the top candidates that apply to their school, assuming there is an interested faculty advisor.

    • @VietLe-ht5mk
      @VietLe-ht5mk 4 роки тому +1

      Learn Law Better Thank you Sir.

  • @allforlaw5625
    @allforlaw5625 4 роки тому +4

    Hi Beau, I have been watching your videos for 18 months now and they have helped me so much. depending on my module choices, a section I have always struggled on is how to Critically evaluate . would this be something you could discuss in on of your videos ? I think this would really help a lot of students. This is essential I believe for forming our own opinions on topics? and helps develop arguments?
    Thank you

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      What to you mean by "critically evaluate"? Can you give me an example? Thanks for watching, and glad I am helping.

  • @tamaravsthevoid
    @tamaravsthevoid 4 роки тому +3

    Watching this instead of my torts lecture 😅

    • @futurekillerful
      @futurekillerful 4 роки тому

      MARICARMEN MELÉNDEZ CÓNDOR LOl y’all are going to make some great lawyers for sure

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      😅

  • @syedatif8806
    @syedatif8806 4 роки тому +3

    Sir, I am an undergraduate engineering student and want to switch to JD/MBA after my graduation. The biggest reason for it is my interest in social sciences, public dealing and overall inclinations. Your channel has been really informative for me. So, I want to ask is it a right decision for me to switch career? I took engineering because being from Pakistan we are expected to select it as an only option but now they have also realized. Kindly answer my question.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +3

      Syed Atif It depends on what you want to do in life. I’ve had several engineers in my classes and they have done well. What you need to do is find out what lawyers and engineers actually do for a living. Go talk to a few and ask them what their typical day looks like.

  • @MrAzuresapphire
    @MrAzuresapphire 4 роки тому

    Bro, what's with the eyepatch? Looks good on you, though :) thanks for the content btw.

  • @aliasjon8320
    @aliasjon8320 4 роки тому +1

    Can someone explain the eyepatch? Haven't checked in with the channel in a while and thought it might be a gag

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      My eye has started to wander more as I age-blind in that eye.

  • @bothi00
    @bothi00 4 роки тому

    “In Europe”
    -shows picture of Radcliffe building at Oxford
    *stares in EU*
    Great video though! Had no idea about the other terminal law degrees besides a Ph.D or LLD.
    In Ireland anyway, I would say the Ph.D in Law is more recognised and taken by students than the LLD
    From what I hear, the University of Oxford offer a DPhil or Mphil in law. Are they much different ?
    I was wondering if (along similar lines to this series) you could do an educational progression of degrees in civil law? I myself am studying for a Bachelor of Civil Law and a Maîtrise en Droit between Dublin and Paris for my undergrads. I hear law schools in Canada offer similar programs of qualifying degrees in Common Law and Civil Law considering the overlap over there (especially in places like Québec).

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +1

      I suspect that all research-based terminal degrees are equivalent because they require a thesis. That is different from some modern terminal degrees, where students primarily complete classes rather than a lengthy thesis.

  • @davidsoto4394
    @davidsoto4394 2 роки тому

    Excellent video.

  • @w.logancaldwell5129
    @w.logancaldwell5129 4 роки тому

    LLB and Viva Frie are > Eagle.

  • @euomu
    @euomu 4 роки тому +3

    It's so interesting to me that you need to have studied another subject before you can go to law school in the US, Canada and Australia.
    I'm from the Netherlands and when it was time for me to choose what bachelor to pursue, law was a very obvious choice. Nothing else really interested me. What are, as far as you know, the most popular bachelor degrees among students with law school ambitions in the US?
    And do you think the benefits of the system that's in place in the US, outweigh its disadvantages? Over here, the big law firms only want young overachievers, so a 25 y/o LL.M is already considered old. I'm assuming US biglaw focusses less on age and more on actual grades, achievements and experience

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +1

      One advantage in the US is maturity. The human brain doesn’t fully develop until age 25, which is about the age that a student graduates with a US law degree. The US system also weeds out the weaker students in college, rather than relying solely on high school grades.

    • @euomu
      @euomu 4 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter Thanks for the reply!

    • @Tara-js3bv
      @Tara-js3bv 4 роки тому +1

      I kind of wish we had this system in Singapore. A lot of high school muggers only go into law because *asian parents* rather than passion.

    • @ricky6608
      @ricky6608 3 роки тому +1

      In some states in Australia you can study Law straight out of High School

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому

      A few of the students I’ve tutored in Australia were LLB students, not JD students. I suspect that over the next few decades, Australia will phase out that option. In the US it took about 40 years for undergraduate legal education to be phased out.

  • @morrischristian8470
    @morrischristian8470 2 роки тому

    Hi sir , I am LLD AND PHD IN LAW FROM INDIA, HOW I WILL ENROLLMENT IN UK

  • @andullahahmed4710
    @andullahahmed4710 3 роки тому +1

    Can you become a assistant district attorney with a LLM degree with specialization in criminal justice ?
    What masters degree can you get to become a law school professor ?

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому

      In the United States you need a JD to become a law professor. An LLM does not make much difference. However, if you are doing multidisciplinary work, then a PhD in that other discipline will be useful. Finally, where you attend law school is important as most law school faculty graduate from the T14.

    • @andullahahmed4710
      @andullahahmed4710 3 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter one more question what if you already have a PhD in another field and have a LLM can you become a law school professor ? Do you have to have a PhD in law ?

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому

      In the United States, you generally need a JD. This is because a law school is a professional school, not an academic department.

  • @nogoogle6349
    @nogoogle6349 4 роки тому +1

    Thumbs up and Subscribed!

  • @kembacudjoe6968
    @kembacudjoe6968 4 роки тому +2

    I have a llb with the university of London via distance learning and a previous sociology degree with a minor in psychology at the university of the west indies. What would you suggest should be my next steps academically to be more attractive for employment? I want to sit the bar exam but I'm hoping I'm approved without having to do an llm.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      Kemba Cudjoe You mean in the US?

    • @kembacudjoe6968
      @kembacudjoe6968 4 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter yes in the US.... sorry I should've stated that in my comment. I've recently migrated and I would like to be able to have good career opportunities. I know Covid-19 may not make this easy unfortunately.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +1

      Joining the bar is the first step. But each State has its own rules. For some you’ll need an LLM, in others you’ll need to earn a JD, and in others you can join the bar without additional education.

    • @kembacudjoe6968
      @kembacudjoe6968 4 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter would the llm have to be with a US institution? And do you know off hand any of the states where I may not need additional education. I'm from NYC.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому

      Kemba Cudjoe You need to earn one at an ABA accredited law school. I believe Wisconsin is a state where you don’t need any additional education-one of my students last year is a lawyer in North Macedonia, but she decided to earn her JD in Illinois because she didn’t want to leave the state.

  • @anushajayadevanarayanan1578
    @anushajayadevanarayanan1578 4 роки тому +1

    Hello Professor. Thanks a lot for that informative video. Is it necessary that a person should have done his/her JD from US to get into teaching in a US Law School? What are the chances for a person who has done his/her UnderGrad and Masters from India, and a PhD from US ?

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  4 роки тому +1

      It likely depends on the prestige of the institutions they attended.

  • @vinsukakannangara5389
    @vinsukakannangara5389 4 роки тому +2

    Yaay new video

  • @pathofjudiciary6458
    @pathofjudiciary6458 Рік тому

    Please suggest me the topic in phd law
    Intersection between cyber fraud and artificial intelligence.. comparative study and its solutions..
    This topic is suggest by my side
    Is this good topic or not
    Please suggest me sir

  • @bwoodward9564
    @bwoodward9564 4 роки тому

    In future laymen will be able to argue their cases with hidden earpieces in a courtroom as if cheating in a casino.(just kidding).

  • @thereal_markymark
    @thereal_markymark 3 роки тому

    Hello I am an Undergraduate Student of Political Sciences and Marketing in Canada, I would like to be a corporate lawyer one day. From what I have taken away, and LL.D is primarily tailored for individuals who wish to be professors of law. Will an LL.M, say in something like Taxation/Commercial/Business/Economic law help me more, in regards to opportunities in the private sector.
    Thank you

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому +1

      I don’t know about Canada, but in the US all you need is the JD. The best opportunities go to graduates of the top law schools. And then to the top graduates of those schools.

    • @thereal_markymark
      @thereal_markymark 3 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter Thank You! I am considering applying to law schools in both Canada and the US.

    • @Learnlawbetter
      @Learnlawbetter  3 роки тому +1

      Focus on the LSAT now. That is more likely to provide more benefits in the long run.

    • @thereal_markymark
      @thereal_markymark 3 роки тому +1

      @@Learnlawbetter Absolutely Sir, writing it next summer, and the one after that; and I have started my research and practice.

  • @Kloudzsky
    @Kloudzsky 2 роки тому

    As an Asian, nice

  • @nogoogle6349
    @nogoogle6349 4 роки тому

    Thank you for the video

  • @pranavpillai7778
    @pranavpillai7778 2 роки тому

    LLM is the way to go. The rest are a waste of time and money.

  • @johnderipper4075
    @johnderipper4075 2 роки тому

    so basically, in the USA get a degree in anything other than law to teach law lol.

  • @johnderipper4075
    @johnderipper4075 2 роки тому

    his info on the UK is bull, you don't go straight to law school out of high school. if you need high level basic GCSE (the first qualification after leaving high school), then you need A-Levels (achieved either at a high school with Sixth Form or in a college). also, I have only ever heard it called a PhD in the UK and nothing else, this includes Oxford uni. please do your research "professor"