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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 256 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Krishna Rodge

Contributor-Level 7

Hi,
There is no major difference as such with the LLB degree subjects that you study. They are the same. The only difference is with the subjects you study in the BLS and BSW degree. The subjects that you study in the first two years of the degree (BLS and BSW) differ from one another but the subjects in your LLB degree remains almost the same. So there is no major difference between these two courses.
Hope this information helps you.
Feel free to revert for any further details and information.
All the very best!

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 44 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Siddharth BhardwajQuantitative Analyst (Credit Risk)

Guide-Level 14

I am not sure about physics, but surely you can combine maths with your humanities subject. If you have economics in your humanities subject then maths as an additional subject can definitely prove to be a boom for you. Knowledge of core mathematics is highly necessary for understanding the advance theorems of Marco-Micro economics. When it comes to the understanding the concept of consumers producer behaviours, price determination, revenue recognition, etc., you must have the knowledge of matrices, differentiation & integration, statistics and probability. These concepts help a lot while having an advanced and realistic knowledge of e
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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 514 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Harsh RanjanCollege Selection Expert

Scholar-Level 17

For an engineering student, it is quite tough to go for Masters in Economic as in whole academic period, students study PCM and no economics, but in Master's degree, a student has to get in-depth knowledge in this subject and needs an introduction to economics before joining MA in Economics. As Economics is a complex subject so after a small introduction to an economics student can get some base for the syllabus and understand the syllabus easily. So, it is beneficial to do MA in economics as less engineering student do this and there is a scope in the finance field, industries, and banking & marketing field.
MA in sociology is the stud
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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 28 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Harsh RanjanCollege Selection Expert

Scholar-Level 17

SET is an entrance exam for admission into law at Symbiosis International University.
Here are a few eligibility conditions for appearing in this exam:
1. Candidate must pass their 12th exam with at least 50% marks for general and for SC/ST passing marks is 45%.
2. Candidate must be less than 20 years at the time of SET exam for general and for SC/ST is 22 year.
3. A candidate who appeared in the exam and result is awaited can also appear in the exam with a proof of awaiting the result.
4. This is an offline exam so the candidate has to follow the institution strictly at the time of exam if any mistake they are rejected from the exam.
Those
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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 41 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Harsh RanjanCollege Selection Expert

Scholar-Level 17

ULSAT exam is organized by the University of Petroleum and Energy Studies (UPES) for admission in Law courses such as BBA LLB, B.Tech LLB, BA LLB, B.Com LLB and LLM.
Here are a few eligibility conditions for admission in UPES for law course in UG and PG level
1. Candidate must be a citizen of India.
2. A candidate who wants admission in B.Tech LLB has to score more than 50% marks in class 12th PCM.
3. A candidate who want admission in other departments of LLB such as BA LLB, BCA LLB has to score overall 50% marks in class 12th.
4. Candidate from any stream can appear in the exam.
5. Candidate age for applying Law courses should be above 17 y
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New answer posted

7 years ago

1 Follower 37 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Rohit SharmaA law student from Nujs to help here

Contributor-Level 10

The course structure is more or less the same except in top law schools, the variery of credit courses i.e additional courses or elective courses are taught by many qualified teachers. I attended the course by supreme court judge of Sri Lanka. Additionally in top law Universities the curriculum is of really great level. Additionally some universities offer BA LLB, while some offer BBA LLB and BCOM LLB and hence in these mandatory courses, the subjects are same at a larger level. I am a student in top law school and one of my friend is doing from state University. We both studied torts, political science, IPC, CRPC and other subject
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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 51 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Aarav JainLLB Student - DU

Beginner-Level 5

I would personally suggest you to be a Master of one, either stick to law or if you want to pursue MBA then stick to it because both the degrees have no connection. Your management skills won't help you in LLB, layering skills and vice versa. The scope of MBA is entirely different from LLB. Still, if you are looking forward to do MBA after LLB, try and do it from the best institute in the country. But LLB won't help you in any sense while you do your MBA. Two different ends, two different degrees.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 781 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Aarav JainLLB Student - DU

Beginner-Level 5

CS is completely different field than being a lawyer. CS works for companies and can earn depending on the company they are hired in. Company's like PWC pay huge packages ranging from 15 Lakhs to 50 Lakhs depending on your caliber. And yes, they would definitely prefer CS with a law degree.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 52 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Aarav JainLLB Student - DU

Beginner-Level 5

Patent lawyers specialize in the field of intellectual property. They may work with inventors during the patent process to ensure the inventors' works are legally protected. They protect their client's right to the invention, so in a way, they earn heavily as their client deal in the invention which fetch more money if it gets the patent. In order to protect their rights, they also earn big money. Moreover, practicing lawyers can't be compared to them as in their own field they earn good money too. One can't compare the two. Take the example of Siddharth Luthra who is a lawyer and deals with cases of crime, he is India's biggest crimin
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New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 30 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Aarav JainLLB Student - DU

Beginner-Level 5

Every specialization is really rewarding if you are master in that field, be that crime, civil, family cases, arbitration cases. There are plethora of clients and cases in every filed. Still, these days, intellectual property rights is an interesting field as subject is enjoyable and have much scope in era of digital world where brand name, advertising plays a big role. And, you tap in big companies as client and be rewarded highly as far as monetary thing is concerned. Arbitration field is highly rewarding too as it's between government PSU and other corporate firms.

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