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Australia
as your study destination
Prerequisites
for studying law in Australia
Choosing
the law school that is best for you
Coming
to Australia
Living
in Australia
Legal
education in Australia
Practising
law in Australia
A
guide to Australia’s law schools
A guide
to Australia’s practical legal training programs
A
guide to Australia’s postgraduate law programs
Acknowledgements |
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[Reproduced from International Graduate, January 2006]
The number of international students studying law in Australia has increased
dramatically in recent years. Why Australia, and why law?
The attraction of Australia is easy enough to understand. A large, open,
friendly and easy-going country, with a spectacularly attractive climate,
a uniquely diverse natural environment, cutting-edge technologies and communications,
an enviably high standard of living, a passion for sport and the outdoors,
and yet, almost
counter-intuitively, a parallel love of the arts and intellectual pursuits.
Moreover, Australians take a large pride in their achievements in these
fields on the world stage, achievements that are out of all proportion to
the relatively small size of the population (around 20 million people).
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Australians are also very welcoming to international students. Positive
benefits flow in two directions. All international students take back
with them to their home countries, in their hearts and their minds, a
little bit of Australia. And while they are in Australia, international
students culturally enrich campuses that might otherwise be boringly monolingual,
homogeneous and even parochial. Despite the hint of hyperbole, it is not
an overstatement, in my view, to say that international student exchanges
and foreign study have the potential to make a major contribution to international
understanding and world peace.
Why law? What attracts international students to Australia to undertake
legal study? What is distinctive about studying law in Australia?
There are two dimensions to legal study: focused training for professional
practice, and the broader pursuit of law as an intellectual discipline.
Professional training is undertaken in the LLB or JD, taken either at
undergraduate level, often in combination with a liberal arts or other
degree, or as a graduate of another discipline. This professional training
must cover a core curriculum for accreditation purposes, but it also incorporates
the broader study of law. The LLB and JD are recognised for admission
to legal practice, not only in Australia but also in some other countries,
at least on completion of whatever additional requirements those other
countries may impose.
Many international students undertake the LLB or JD in Australia, even
though those degrees are usually only partially transferable back to their
home countries as qualifications to practise law there. Most, however,
undertake postgraduate programs: diplomas, masters degrees, and doctoral
degrees, by coursework or research or a combination of both. These programs
may offer further specialisations of particular relevance to legal practice,
or broad explorations of legal themes, including jurisprudential theory,
international law, and problems of law and society.
Unlike the United States, all Australian law schools are accredited for
the admission of their graduates to legal practice in Australia. However,
not all run postgraduate programs. The details of all of the programs
offered by Australian law schools may conveniently be found on this web
site.
Why the interest in law?
In addition to the attractions of legal practice, students are drawn to
the study of law for broader reasons. Legal training in Australia confers
broad generic skills such as the skills of incisive analysis, logical
reasoning, creative problem-solving, clear communication, and practical
negotiation, all of which transcend their legal context and equip graduates
for a surprisingly wide variety of careers. Law students in Australia,
undergraduate and postgraduate, also have an interest in studying law
beyond the immediate demands of legal practice simply because they are
interested in it for its own sake. There is a certain fascination, and
an understandable one, affecting local and international students alike,
in endeavouring to understand law as part of the glue that holds society
together, and how it connects with other disciplines such as economics,
history, philosophy, psychology and political science.
What, though, is the particular attraction to the international student
of studying law in Australia? I think it is a combination of everything
I have noted above. You get to come to a wonderful country, with a long
tradition of commitment to the rule of law as a fundamental underpinning
of a healthy and robust democracy, and a mature and sophisticated legal
system, in the complicating but interesting context of a federal state.
The Australian legal system can claim in many ways to have set international
benchmarks. At different times, the High Court of Australia has been regarded
as the intellectual leader amongst national courts in the common law world.
Australian jurists are held in high esteem throughout the world. Australian
law graduates are recognised internationally for their high levels of
legal skills and knowledge. It is a great place in which to undertake
the study of this basic discipline: a relatively young country that has
absorbed many foreign influences, moulded them into something unique,
and can now export the resultant product - in this case, Australian legal
education - with confidence and pride.
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