21秋-新加坡国立大学-国际仲裁与争端解决法
背景介绍
申请难点
留学规划与提升
About the National University of Singapore,
Faculty of Law (NUS Law): NUS Law is widely regarded to be one of the premier global law schools and as Asia’s leading law school. Staffed by an outstanding permanent faculty diverse in origin and qualifications, NUS Law is dedicated to building a vibrant community and creating an environment that facilitates critical thinking and reflection on the fundamental legal issues confronting our interconnected world. In the 2020 Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings for law schools, NUS Law was ranked 12th in the world and top in Asia.
About the LLM (IADR): The LLM (IADR),
which was launched in August 2016, seeks to nurture lawyers and scholars to conduct rigorous and independent inquiries into relevant dispute resolution issues, to promote transnational approaches to arbitration, to articulate critical and impactful insights, and to propose solutions beneficial to the local and global communities. This new specialised LLM programme enables a student to acquire an in-depth understanding of the laws and practices of international arbitration and dispute resolution. It has the advantage of being located in Singapore which is the one of the preferred locations for arbitration in the world, and where many top arbitrators and academics often converge. The director of the programme is Associate Professor Gary F. Bell. In order to obtain the LLM (IADR), students will have to complete a total of 40-44 course credits in two semesters, out of which 24 credits (5 or 6 courses) must be in the specialisation field. The remaining credits may be chosen from an unrestricted range of electives or from the specialisation field.
院校解读
留学方案
案例分析
学生背景分享
广东外语外贸大学 应届大四在读 法学专业 GPA3.67 雅思7.5 有2段实习。
课程安排
NUS Law offers a broad and diverse range of over 120 elective courses. Students enrolled in the LLM (IADR) are eligible to choose up to 16 credits of unrestricted elective courses from clusters such as Asian Legal Studies, Corporate & Financial Services Law, Intellectual Property & Technology Law, International & Comparative Law and Maritime Law. The compulsory IADR courses (totaling 11 course credits) are: International Commercial Arbitration, International Dispute Settlement, and Topics in International Arbitration and Dispute Settlement. Some of the elective courses of the IADR specialisation include: Advanced Issues in the Law & Practice of International Arbitration, Advanced Practicum in International Arbitration, Arbitration & Dispute Resolution in China, Comparative Evidence in International Arbitration, Conflict of Laws in International Commercial Arbitration, Energy Arbitration, SIAC Arbitration, ICC Arbitration, International Arbitration in Asian Centres, International Investment Law, International Investment Law & Arbitration, Mediation/Conciliation of Inter- & Investor-State Disputes, The Evolution of International Arbitration, Negotiation and Mediation. The programme also offers a selection of carefully curated “super-intensive” 18-hour courses taught during the mid-semester breaks in September by international visitors including Professors Gary Born, Fabien Gélinas, Bernard Hanotiau and Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler.