Can the on-the-job Master of Laws take the judicial examination?

If you want to know whether you can take the judicial examination after graduating from the on-the-job master of law, you must first understand the conditions for taking the judicial examination.

According to the relevant provisions of the Measures for the Implementation of the National Unified Legal Professional Qualification Examination, persons who meet the following conditions can sign up for the legal professional qualification examination:

(1) Having China nationality;

(two) support the people and the Constitution of China, and enjoy the right to vote and stand for election;

(3) Having good political and professional qualities and moral conduct;

(4) Having full capacity for civil conduct;

(5) Having a bachelor's degree in law from a full-time ordinary institution of higher learning, and having obtained a bachelor's degree or above; Or a full-time college with a bachelor's degree or above in illegal studies and a master's degree or above in law; Or full-time colleges and universities have obtained a bachelor's degree or above in non-law major and obtained a corresponding degree, and have been engaged in legal work for three years.

Before the implementation of these measures, graduates with bachelor's degree or above in law major in colleges and universities who have registered or obtained corresponding qualifications, or graduates with bachelor's degree or above in law major in colleges and universities, who have legal professional knowledge, can sign up for the national unified legal professional qualification examination.

It can be seen that if you want to take the judicial examination, no matter what the candidate's original major is, the undergraduate stage only recognizes full-time. Even if the undergraduate major is not law, you can apply for the judicial examination as long as you get a master's degree in law. Therefore, a master's degree from full-time undergraduate study of law can apply for the judicial examination.

Part-time undergraduate graduates can apply for full-time graduate students, choose law graduate students, obtain relevant master's degrees after graduation, and have more than three years of work experience before they can apply for the exam. Of course, if they choose full-time graduate students majoring in law and get a master's degree in law through on-the-job postgraduate study, they can also sign up for the judicial examination.