The Professional / Graduate Diploma in Law (CPE / GDL) Joint Review is a postgraduate law course in England and Wales that no law graduates (graduates who have a degree in a discipline that is not legal or not taken law degree qualifying for legal practice) wishing to be either a lawyer or solicitor in England and Wales. Thus, the course enables students to turn lawless law later (there are exceptions for undergraduates in the circumstances) of the university; also commonly known as a "law conversion course." Regulated by the Law Regulation Authority, the course is designed as an intensive program which covers roughly the same content a Bachelor of Law Degree in Law (Honours) and the main goal is to allow people with a greater variety of educational backgrounds in the legal profession.
Most CPE courses awarded a diploma and thus often are titled Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL). Post-nominal common abbreviations include LL.Dip (Lex. Legis Diploma), PgDL (Postgraduate Diploma in Law) or Dip.Law (Diploma in Law).
The CPE is a (full-time) or two (part-time) long years, and candidates can proceed either the Legal Practice Course (LPC) for lawyers or Bar Vocational Training (BPTC) of lawyers. It is regulated by the Law Society of England and Wales admissions handled through the Central Applications Board.
Some law students studying for four years (instead of three years, although this is only for students taking a law degree in combination with the LPC, or whose courses include study abroad), so it is possible that while no law and law graduates starting the same year to finish while the CPE which provides the "foundations of legal knowledge."
No comments:
Post a Comment