Sciences Po Law School
Sciences Po Law School is a graduate school created in 2009 inside Sciences Po in Paris, France.
History
In 2009, Sciences Po created the "École de droit de Sciences Po", delivering graduate degrees only, after a controversy regarding the access to the bar for Sciences Po students.Academics
Teaching
Sciences Po Law School is an exclusively graduate program and admits students without undergraduate legal education.It contains:
- two master programs in Law: a two-year Master in Economic Law, which can be followed in either French or English and a two-year Master in Legal and Judicial Career taught entirely in French). Students of the Master in Economic Law can take a gap year between the two years of the program.
- a three-year joint Master in Law and Finance with Sciences Po's School of Management and Innovation
- a one-year LLM in Transnational Arbitration and Dispute Settlement
- a PhD program
Student body
40% of its student population are exchange students from abroad.Rankings and performance
Rankings
Among international english-speaking rankings, Sciences Po is ranked in Law:- 51-100th by QS World University Rankings
- not ranked among the top 187 by The Times Higher Education.
- Economic Law: 4th of France
- European and International Business Law: 8th of France
- Undergraduate program: not ranked among the top 10
Performance
Sciences Po graduates report a 67% success in the Bar Exam in 2017.In 2018, the success rate for the school’s preparatory school at the French National School for the Judiciary entrance exam was 45%, with 8 students in the top 10 and 20 in the top 30.
In 2018, 70% of the students of the Master in Economic law have found a job six months after they graduated.
Notable faculty
- George Bermann, international arbitration lawyer
- Emmanuel Gaillard, head of Shearman & Sterling's International Arbitration practice