Western Law's Master of Laws program consists of four courses and a substantial thesis of publishable quality.
The LL.M. requires: The three required courses are fundamental courses for thesis work, introducing students to various schools of legal theory and advanced research methodologies, and developing writing and self-critical editing skills. Two of the three required courses (Approaches to Legal Scholarship and Guided Study and Research Methodology) are offered in the Fall Term and are taken by both full-time and part-time students in their first term of study. These two required courses also provide, in the first term of the student's program, a forum for all students in a given cohort. The third required course (Graduate Colloquium) is taken by full time students in the Winter Term and by part-time students in the Winter Term of the second year of study. This required course builds on the skills developed in the other two courses, and culminates in the presentation by each student of his or her thesis proposal together with a draft chapter from the thesis as a work-in-progress.
LL.M. Program
Overview of LL.M. Program
For full-time students, the degree is designed to take one year (three terms) to complete. For part-time students the degree is designed to take two years (six terms) to complete. We limit our enrolment to approx. 12 students each year.Structure of program
Recommended Course of Study: Full-TimeFall Term
Winter Term
Summer Term
Recommended Course of Study: Part-Time
Year One
Fall Term
Winter Term
* End of Summer Term: submission of thesis proposal and draft chapter of thesisYear Two
Fall Term
Winter Term
* February – early April: oral presentation of thesis proposal and draft chapter of thesisSummer Term
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