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I'm wondering at which level you are stuck, since law is only available as a graduate program, at least in the U.S. If you are really stuck, how about this? You could get an undergraduate degree in Psychology, then get a combined JD/MBA degree as a grad student. Many universities offer these programs, and it would allow you more latitude in terms of whether you want to use your law degree within a business, or your business degree within a law firm. And knowing what makes people operate is always useful.

2007-12-23 05:51:45 · answer #1 · answered by neniaf 7 · 0 0

Well, you usually need a degree before going to law school, which means you should pick either psychology or business for your undergrad, then consider doing law afterwards.

Between psych and business... What interests you most? Figuring out people, why they do what they do, all that. Or understanding how businesses work, management and all that? And if you do end up in law afterwards, what sort of law interests you? A psych. degree can be powerful for a lawyer, but if corporate/business law is more your thing, then the business degree would be really good.

What do you think would truly satisfy you most? What can you see yourself doing in 20 years?

2007-12-23 13:49:59 · answer #2 · answered by glurpy 7 · 0 0

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