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Do law schools offer specialties in certain fields?

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Do law schools offer specialties in certain fields?

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Not really, or at least not in the same way that graduate programs are organized departmentally (e.g., history, philosophy, economics, and English). In fact, the first-year law school curriculum is remarkably uniform across the country. It almost always includes a mix of contracts, civil procedure, criminal law, property, torts, a seminar on legal research and writing, with perhaps an elective or two. And every law school offers standard upper-division courses such as taxation, constitutional law, accounting, business organizations, and so on. Some law schools offer additional courses in areas such as “entertainment law” or “sports law”; but those additional courses do not really create specialists. For most applicants, it would probably be a mistake to choose one school over another because it offers a “specialization.” For more information about law school curriculum, you might want to consult Looking at Law School: A Student Guide from the Society of Law School Teachers . It is edit

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