Political Science, asked by ARP7, 4 months ago

What are the types of lawyers ? & which law study is very most difficult ?​

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Answered by Sahanja
4

Explanation:

There are two types of criminal law attorneys, prosecutors and defense attorneys. Prosecutors represent the state they work for and bring criminal charges against individuals accused of committing a crime. Defense attorneys represent the people accused of committing a crime.

Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) , The Most Difficult Course (Philippine Setting) In other countries, those who wish to study law would select one major field i.e. Criminal Law or Immigration Law

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Answered by AdityaSharma200414
1

Answer:

Immigration Lawyers – They help the individuals or companies with immigration processes, paperwork, visas, and deportation processes. Estate Lawyers – These estate planning lawyers draft legal documents like powers of attorney, trusts, wills, deeds and tax implications.

Studying law is as hard as you make it.

Some people choose to make it very very hard. These are the people you see buried under a mountain of books in the library as it’s ready to close. They’ll be there tomorrow, just before it opens.

It need not be that way.

A skill one (ideally) learns in law school is how to throw out information. That sounds completely backwards to some people, who think law school is about cramming as much information into your head as possible. Wrong, at least in my opinion.

The atomic unit of law school reading assignments is to read one case. Cases have a certain basic structure: there are some facts, there is an abstract statement of the law, then there is an application of that abstract law to the facts, to reach an ultimate result. There might be other stuff too, but every case has those few ingredients.

Why are you reading the case at this particular moment in your education? There is some point to it, and you should be aware of what that point is. Maybe this is a refinement of the law articulated in the previous case. Maybe this is an illustration about how the law applies to certain facts (e.g., same law, but applied to different facts gives a different result). Maybe it’s something else.

But I guarantee, the real takeaway of a case is at most a paragraph… maybe it’s only a sentence or two. The trick is finding that sentence. To do so requires throwing away all the other stuff.

Don’t get me wrong, throwing away the right stuff isn’t as easy as it sounds. But with practice, you can get to the point where you can skim a case, and have this mental voice going in your head: “Blah blah blah…” until the case gets a little interesting. Then you instinctively slow down. And when you come to “the takeaway,” you know it. You skim the rest of the case, just to make sure nothing crazy happens. But the whole thing can take 10 minutes when you’re good at it, and it can take 60 minutes when you’re not.

And if you’re seriously misguided and you actually try to learn every word, every fact, every footnote, etc. of a case, then who knows how long it will take. Too long.

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