LLB/PGDNL Program is aimed at producing service-ready lawyers and generations of future leaders, who can take their responsibility seriously, and carry out fundamental duties with Justice, Service, and Wisdom. In this effort, our programs can be understood as having three qualities: (1) ensuring thorough grounding by giving sufficient focus by allowing students to pursue deep knowledge in legal doctrine and other broader areas and approaches of law; (2) enhancing students’ skills—research, advocacy, and interpersonal relationship skills by focusing on research-based teaching and learning and practical application of law in the society through clinical programs; and (3) preparing students to become responsible leaders by focusing on professional ethics, the Buddhist values, and universal human values.
JSW Law’s LLB/PGDNL program can be best described in three levels:
Foundational Level
As the law is an interdisciplinary concept, studying law requires understanding the law from philosophical, economic, political and religious perspectives. Studying and doing the law requires examining law from different contexts and mastering research, writing and advocacy or communication skills. Therefore, the first two years of the law school, provide students with a solid grounding on languages (Dzongkha and English), humanities, social sciences, and skills such as legal composition, research, writing and advocacy.
Doctrinal & Principles Level
Starting from the first year, students are provided with an intellectual grounding on core legal theories, principles and concepts, and legal skills by providing training students on legal reasoning and analysis. Students take mandatory courses including torts, contracts, penal law and restorative justice, procedural law, property law, constitutional law, environmental law, corporate law, family law, administrative law, appropriate dispute resolution, international law, and commercial law.
Specialisation & Experiential Level
In the eighth and ninth semesters, students are offered elective options (which students may choose based on the programs of study), and all students must participate in a two-semester clinical education and practice. In the tenth semester, all students must go for full-time practical training (credited internships) in a law office, court, or other organisations, whether in Bhutan or abroad.
Course Rota
- Sumtag
- Ngag-doen
- Economics
- Philosophy
- Legal Research & Writing
- Nyen-ngag
- Bhutanese Political & Legal History
- Political Science
- Contract Law
- Tort Law
- Chen-jug
- Jurisprudence
- International Law
- Oral Advocacy and Logic
- Property Law
- Moot Court
- Civil & Criminal Procedure
- Environmental Law
- Tshed-Ma
- Penal Law & Restorative Justice
- Legal Drafting – Conveyances and Pleadings
- Constitutional Law I ( Comparative Constitutional Law)
- Evidence
- FDI Law
- Corporate Law
- Administrative Law, Anti-Corruption & Public Procurement
- Constitutional Law II (Bhutanese Constitutional Law)
- Family Law
- ADR I – Negotiation & Mediation
- Legal Research Methodologies
- Professional Responsibility & Ethics
- Statutory Interpretation & Legislative Drafting
- Intellectual Property Law
- ADR II – Arbitration
- ELECTIVE I
- Bhutanese & International Commercial Law
- GNH & Law
- Law Clinic I (24 units)
- Human Dignity Clinic I
- ADR Clinic I
- Entreprenerialism Clinic I
- Climate Change & Environmental Law Clinic I
- ELECTIVE II
- Law Clinic II (24 units)
- Human Dignity Clinic II
- ADR Clinic II
- Entreprenerialism Clinic II
- Climate Change & Environmental Law Clinic II
- ELECTIVE III
- ELECTIVE IV
- ELECTIVE V
- Externship (48 units)
- Externship writing (12 Units)