I am not sure what you mean.dfm said:if i was to go to the gong for law, what kind of marks would i need to achieve in order to be able to complete honours at somewhere like syd or unsw?
Well actually, you write both in your qualifications, so you write "LLB LLM".Optophobia said:LLM becomes their title. If they do doctor of laws, they become LLD.
They are no longer LLB.
The first person is what i said. The second person is a compromise. The third person is what you said. Confusinghttp://www.handbook.uts.edu.au/law/faculty/staff.html said:Sir Gerard Brennan Research Professor
P M Redmond, BA, LLM (Syd)
Director (Students)
B M Olliffe, BA(Hons), LLB (Syd), LLM (UTS), Solicitor of the Supreme Court of NSW
Director (Courses)
R Reynolds, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD (Syd)
This is indeed the reason:Optophobia said:You're most likely right, but LLB LLM seems a bit contradictory. The only time i've seen the two included together is when they obtained the LLB from one university and the LLM from another university.
An example is Justice Gummow of the High Court. His Honour has a BA and LLM, but no LLB._dhj_ said:I think that's because you used to be able to do LLM without doing an LLB - the prerequisite is something else. Not 100% sure about that one.