Do I want to spend my days in court or in the library? How can I juggle studying with work? Is it best to study in the UK or abroad? What is life like as an academic? If I decide to practise law afterwards will employers see it as a waste of time?
As LLB, GDL, LPC and BTPC students hand in final pieces of coursework and complete the last exam, thoughts may turn to further study. If you are a graduate considering research or a master's in law, our panel will be online between 6pm and 8pm on Wednesday 1 June to answer questions and share tips.
They are:
- Dr Fiona de Londras is a lecturer in University College Dublin school of law. Her research focuses primarily on human rights and counter-terrorism. She has also advised numerous NGOs in Ireland on human rights and is founder of the Human Rights in Ireland site.
- Michael Wells-Greco combines private practice and lecturing in private international law abd family law in Europe at the University of Maastricht. He has law degrees from University College London and Università degli Studi di Genova and a LLM cum laude in European and International Law.
- Dr Erika Rackley is a senior lecturer in law and director of undergraduate studies in the law school at Durham University. She is an expert on judicial diversity and appointments and is co-convenor and co-founder of Gender & Law at Durham.
- Lorna Heselton recently completed a Human Rights Law LLM from Birbeck College. She studied part-time in the evenings while working as an individual caseworker at LawWorks.
- Peter Watts is a professor at the law faculty of the University of Auckland. He teaches company law, agency law, and the law of restitution and runs the LLM programme, which is the largest in New Zealand.
Post questions and worries below, and check back during or after the Q&A for replies.
reff:guardian.co.uk
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