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How to Apply

Come join us

Graduate Programs at the Schulich School of Law begin each September.
There are NO Winter or Spring term admissions. 

Admission for September 2023 is CLOSED

Applications for September 2024 will open later this summer.

Be sure to apply online for September 2024 by:

  • December 1st - with funding consideration
  • February 15th - NO Funding consideration

Only applicants who have submitted ALL application documents by the deadline will be considered. You have 2 weeks from the above stated deadlines to submit application documents, though you can connect with the Administrative Coordinator earlier about document submission process.

Our LLM is NOT compatible with the NCA requirements and can not be used as a method to achieve the required credentials to practice law in Nova Scotia/Canada.

Follow these 3 steps to apply:

For all graduate applicants:

Step 1

Complete an and pay your C$115 application fee (payable by credit card or Western Union).

Step 2

Arrange for the following documentation to be sent to the Schulich School of Law, Graduate Studies Office:

  1. Two copies of your official university transcripts (originals only – a notarized translation is also required for each non-English transcript in addition to an original transcript sent directly from the host university in a sealed envelope). You must include transcripts from every university degree program you've attended. They must be sent directly from the granting university to the Schulich School of Law Graduate Studies Office. In the case of institutions unable to send physical copies of transcripts due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they can send official electronic copies directly to lawgrad@dal.ca
  2. If you are an international student and your language of instruction was not English, results from your English language proficiency test.  These results must be sent directly from the office that administered the test.
  3. TWO letters of reference, preferably from academic specialists in law who are familiar with your work and your scholarly capabilities. You will have the opportunity to include the referee contact information on your online application, otherwise these letters must be sent directly from the referees to the Schulich School of Law Graduate Studies Office.

Graduate Studies Office (lawgrad@dal.ca)
Schulich School of Law
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Room 441, 6061 University Avenue
PO BOX 15000
Halifax NS B3H 4R2
CANADA

For LLM applicants only:

Step 3

Send the following to the Schulich School of Law, Graduate Studies Office or via email to lawgrad@dal.ca:

  1. Curriculum Vitae
  2. Motivation letter, stating why you are interested in the Schulich School of Law and what you hope to achieve with your degree.
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  4. All LLM applicants must include a preliminary major paper proposal or thesis proposal (depending on whether you are applying for the course or thesis based LLM). The proposal should be roughly 1,000 words and include:
  • A proposed title for the paper or thesis.
  • A brief description of the research topic to be explored.
  • A clear articulation of the research question(s) to be answered or the hypothesis to be tested.
  • A clear articulation of the research methodology or methodologies to be applied, and relevant theory to be explored.
  • A working draft of the bibliography that clearly identifies the background research the student has carried out to develop the proposal (not included in the word count).

This proposal will serve to inform the committee on the most appropriate supervisors for thesis students, and it will inform the committee's assessment of the applicant's academic writing ability. The final thesis proposal will ultimately be worked on with your supervisor during the program.

For PhD applicants only:

Step 3
1. Curriculum Vitae
2. Complete list of publications (if any)
3. Writing sample, in English, of a legal essay (approximately 3000 words)
4. Motivation letter, stating why you are interested in the Schulich School of Law and what you hope to achieve with your degree.
5. Thesis proposal (maximum approximately 3000 words) should include:
  • A proposed title for the paper or thesis.
  • A brief description of the research topic to be explored.
  • A clear articulation of the research question(s) to be answered or the hypothesis to be tested.
  • A clear articulation of the research methodology or methodologies to be applied, and relevant theory to be explored.
  • A working draft of the bibliography that clearly identifies the background research the student has carried out to develop the proposal (not included in the word count).