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As I understand, most states require you to graduate law school to qualify to take the bar. Must you go to law school to practice patent law? How does one get started in the field? Thanks in advance for any info.

2007-06-14 09:30:03 · 3 answers · asked by khuntaquintae 2 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment Law & Legal

3 answers

You do still need to go to law school to be a patent attorney. The most successful patent attorneys will be "hard science" undergrads--chemistry, biology, engineering, etc. You will also be helped by taking the Patent Bar. You do not need to graduate law school to take the Patent Bar (I know several people who did it *during* law school), but you will need to graduate to practice patent law.

2007-06-14 09:56:55 · answer #1 · answered by tara k 3 · 0 0

Of course you will need a law degree from a very well accredited university. Most patent attorneys also have undergraduate degrees in one or more of the engineering disciplines. It's not a requisite, but it will certainly make your resume far more attractive to an intellectual property law firm.

2007-06-14 09:36:38 · answer #2 · answered by acermill 7 · 0 0

its tremendous, thanks for asking. the classic gross sales is $179.5k a twelve months. you paintings a 35-40 5 hour week and also you nevertheless make numerous funds engineering is major in patent regulation its an outstanding occupation selection reliable success

2016-11-24 19:16:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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