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  1. The University of Chicago Law School uniquely offers the combination of a small (70–80 students) and diverse (more than 25 nationalities) LLM program with a real sense of community among our students.

  2. Apply to the LLM. The University of Chicago Law School's Graduate Programs Committee seeks to bring together a small, diverse, elite cohort of students to the LLM. Each year the LLM class is made up of between 70 and 80 students from every corner of the globe, with each student looking for an academically challenging legal education.

  3. Application Requirements. Candidates applying for admission to the LLM Program must use the LSAC LLM Credential Assembly Service. Chicago requires both the Document Assembly Service (DAS) and the International Transcript Authentication and Evaluation Service (ITAES).

  4. The dates provided below are intended to give prospective applicants a general idea of the application/review/response sequence. Assuming an application is received by our published deadlines, the exact date of review will have no impact on the final outcome; each application will have a full review once it is completed.

  5. The LLM degree is awarded to students who have successfully completed 27 course hours (generally nine courses) over three quarters while maintaining a grade point average of 170. There is no dissertation or major paper requirement in the LLM Program.

  6. 8 de dez. de 2010 · The LLM class is broken down into nine groups of seven or eight students. These groups are arranged so that the membership in each group will include LLM students from as many different countries and regions as possible. Each group also has four JD student organizers, known as International Fellows.

  7. Summary of LL.M Program Requirements. A minimum of 27 credit hours completed and passed. Students must be in residence, full-time, for three quarters of no fewer than nine credit hours per quarter. LLM Thesis. Under certain circumstances, a thesis option is available upon application to the Law School’s Director of Graduate Programs.