English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

3 answers

Oh geez. I'm sorry, but I'd say ignore everything brad just said.

If you want to be an immigration lawyer, in college, I'd take the opportunity to learn another language. Especially in the language of the group you'd like to target.

However, there's not much you need to do in college in terms of course work. Definitely don't major in Latin. That's useless. You're going to be dealing a lot in administrative law. Nothing in undergrad translates that well in terms of preparation. Taking something that deals with international relationships might help a little, but overall, not that much.

In all honesty, unless you find a major that offers a lot of courses regarding immigration, just take whatever you feel like. Maybe another area totally in case you change your mind about immigration.

In law school, take all the immigration classes you can. See if there's an immigration clinic you can participate in. Get all the internships at immigration law firms as you can.

2007-02-12 07:53:50 · answer #1 · answered by Linkin 7 · 0 0

Major in Pre-Law as an undergrad, minor in something like Latin American studies or International Relations. Then apply for Law School. Complete Law School, pass the bar, and start lawyerin'!

2007-02-11 02:58:48 · answer #2 · answered by Brad 4 · 0 2

nicely i could bypass to varsity get a level in Political technological information, bypass to take the LSats. Get usual to regulation college, bypass to regulation college for 3 years, then choose for an LLM in immigration regulation, and then discover an business enterprise to intern in.

2016-10-01 23:04:57 · answer #3 · answered by hansmann 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers