Peking University
Peking University School of Law was established on June 26, 1999. Its predecessor was the Department of Law of Peking University. The law discipline of Peking University was founded in 1904 and is the oldest discipline in modern legal education in China.
Since the reform and opening up, Peking University Law School has achieved rapid development and has always been at the forefront of national law schools in terms of talent training, scientific research, discipline construction, and promotion of national rule of law.
China Women's University
The Law School of China Women's University was established in 2012, its predecessor was the Law Department established in 1986.
In the past 30 years of running a school, the Law School has taken serving the protection and development of women’s rights and interests and serving society as its own responsibility, and has accumulated rich experience in running a school and good conditions for running a school. Research and services in the fields of women's law, marriage and family law are at the forefront of the country.
The School of Law is the secretariat unit of the Marriage Law Research Society of the China Law Society. It is an important think tank in the fields of Chinese women’s development, rights protection and family law. It is a legal education with unique influence and good reputation at home and abroad. and research base.
Employment prospects for law majors:
In recent years, law has been a hot topic among liberal arts students. Traditionally, students who graduate from law majors will engage in professions with high social status and high income, such as judges and prosecutors.
So many parents and candidates prefer to major in law, thinking that they can work in careers such as judges, prosecutors, and college teachers after graduation. In fact, these jobs have quite high requirements for university background or academic level.
In recent years, many law students have chosen to continue their studies and obtain postgraduate law degrees from famous Chinese universities. Most law graduates engage in legal work in legislative bodies, administrative agencies, judicial agencies, procuratorial agencies, arbitration agencies, law firms, banks and other units.