JGLS LLM (Environmental Law) FAQs
Ques. Why is the LLM (Environmental Law, Energy & Climate Change) at JGLS non-residential? Who is it designed for?
Ans. The LLM (Environmental Law, Energy & Climate Change) is specifically designed as a non-residential programme to make it accessible to working professionals, civil servants, diplomats, legal practitioners, and judges who cannot relocate to Sonepat for a full-time residential programme. The non-residential format allows students to continue their professional work while pursuing the LLM, making it ideal for mid-career professionals seeking to specialize in environmental law.
Ques. What is the significance of the WWF-India collaboration in this LLM programme?
Ans. The collaboration with WWF-India brings real-world conservation and environmental law expertise into the classroom. WWF-India's practitioners and experts contribute to the curriculum, guest lectures, and field studies, providing students with practical insights into environmental law implementation in India. The programme also includes a mandatory field study course on the Implementation of Conservation Laws in India, which is a unique feature not found in most LLM programmes.
Ques. What is the King's College London (KCL) Clinic Course in this programme?
Ans. The programme includes a mandatory 4-credit Clinic Course offered jointly with King's College London (KCL), one of the world's leading law schools. This clinic course provides students with international exposure to environmental law practice, covering comparative environmental law, climate litigation, and international environmental governance. It is a unique feature that distinguishes this programme from other environmental law LLM programmes in India.
Ques. What are the career opportunities in environmental law and climate change in India?
Ans. Environmental law is a rapidly growing field in India, driven by increasing environmental litigation, climate change policy, renewable energy regulation, and ESG compliance requirements. Career opportunities include environmental lawyers at law firms and NGOs, legal advisors at government agencies (MoEFCC, CPCB, SPCBs), policy advisors at international organizations (UNEP, UNFCCC), energy regulatory lawyers (CERC, SERCs), and corporate sustainability and ESG counsel. The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has also created significant demand for environmental law specialists.
Ques. Can I pursue this LLM if I am a civil servant or government official?
Ans. Yes, the LLM (Environmental Law, Energy & Climate Change) is specifically designed to welcome civil servants, diplomats (with a law degree), and government officials. The non-residential format makes it particularly suitable for government officials who cannot take a full year's leave for a residential programme. The programme's focus on national and international environmental law, energy regulation, and climate change governance is highly relevant for government officials working in these areas.
Ques. How does the LLM (Environmental Law, Energy & Climate Change) differ from the LLM (General Legal Studies) with environmental law electives?
Ans. The LLM (Environmental Law, Energy & Climate Change) is a specialized, non-residential programme with a focused curriculum on environmental law, energy law, and climate change governance, offered jointly with WWF-India and including a clinic course with King's College London. The LLM (General Legal Studies) is a residential programme that allows students to take some environmental law electives but does not provide the same depth of specialization, industry connections, or the unique WWF-India and KCL collaborations. For students specifically interested in environmental law, the specialized programme is the better choice.
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