The Graduate Studies Committee of the program concerned bases its decision on the sum of all required documents once the application is complete.
To be considered for admission to the master of laws (LLM) program applicants must:
- have an undergraduate law degree (LL.L., LL.B., J.D. or B.C.L.) from a Canadian university or an equivalent foreign law degree;
- have an average of at least 70% (B), calculated in accordance with graduate studies guidelines;
- a particular attention is paid to relevant legal experience, prior research and letters of reference.
Admission to our Master of Laws is quite competitive. Candidates generally considered must hold an undergraduate law degree, unless they have considerable practical and professional experience in the area they propose to research which would justify admission to the graduate studies in law. Candidates applying with a non-law related undergraduate degree are extremely rarely, if ever, admitted into the program on the strength of a non-law undergraduate degree.
Admission will depend not just on the academic caliber of the candidate, but also on faculty resources. We will not admit candidates whose proposed research proposal fall outside the expertise of our faculty members available to act as supervisors. Candidates are strongly advised to review the online profiles for Faculty of Law professors, and to ensure their research proposals deal with subjects lying within faculty member fields of research expertise. Research topics must have an evident legal focus. It is extremely unlikely that a candidate proposing a topic of pure foreign law, without any international or Canadian comparative element will be admitted to the graduate program.
Exceptionally, a degree from another discipline may be accepted, but only if you have acquired experience in the legal field or legal-related areas, and your proposed research project concerns legal matters. Applicants who are current students in, or recent graduates of, degrees other than those listed above will generally not be considered for admission.
To be considered for admission to the Doctorate in law program applicants must:
- have a master of laws degree (LLM) from a Canadian university or an equivalent foreign law degree;
- have an average of at least 75% (B+), calculated in accordance with graduate studies guidelines;
- a particular attention is paid to relevant legal experience, prior research and letters of reference.
- demonstrated legal research and writing abilities;
- a particular attention is paid to relevant legal experience, prior research and letters of reference.
Exceptionally, a degree from another discipline may be accepted, but only if you have acquired substantial experience in the legal field or legal-related areas, and your proposed research project concerns legal matters. Applicants who are current students in, or recent graduates of, degrees other than those listed above will generally not be considered for admission.