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Law · Library
Law as an academic discipline studies the systems of rules that govern human society — their content, their interpretation, their enforcement, their underlying philosophical and political foundations, and their consequences for behaviour and welfare. The field has structural complexity because legal scholarship operates in two registers — doctrinal (analysing what the law says and means in a specific jurisdiction) and theoretical (analysing law as a general phenomenon across jurisdictions, which connects law to philosophy, political science, economics, sociology, history). The professional-degree structure of law also creates a distinctive academic-architecture pattern — most countries have undergraduate or graduate law degrees that prepare practitioners (the LLB or JD) plus separate research-doctorate programs (the PhD or SJD) for academic careers.\n\nThe global law-school landscape has substantial jurisdictional variation. In the US: the "T14" elite law schools (Yale, Stanford, Harvard, Chicago, Columbia, NYU, Penn, Berkeley, Virginia, Michigan, Northwestern, Duke, Cornell, Georgetown). In the UK: Oxford, Cambridge, LSE, UCL, KCL, Edinburgh, Durham, plus the broader Russell Group law schools. In Continental Europe: the Sorbonne, Bocconi (the Italian flagship), Bologna, Heidelberg, Munich (LMU), Leiden, KU Leuven, the European University Institute Florence (with its Department of Law, the principal European post-graduate law-research institution). In Asia: the National University of Singapore (NUS Law) is consistently among the top-10 law schools globally; Chinese University of Hong Kong; HKU; Peking University Law School; Tsinghua University Law School; the National Law Universities (NLUs) in India (NLSIU Bangalore, NALSAR Hyderabad, NUJS Calcutta, NLU Delhi, NLU Jodhpur, GNLU Gandhinagar, the broader 23-campus NLU system); Symbiosis Law School and the older National Law School System; ILS Law College Pune; the Faculty of Law at Delhi University; Government Law College Bombay; the post-2009 Jindal Global Law School; and the substantial legal-academic ecosystem in the Indian state-affiliated law colleges.\n\nIndia's legal-education system has structural distinctness given the country's pluralistic-legal-system character. The Indian legal system combines British common-law inheritance plus the Constitution of India (1950) plus the personal-laws system that governs marriage, divorce, inheritance, and succession differently for Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Parsis, Jews, and Sikhs. The Bar Council of India regulates the legal profession; the National Law Universities established starting 1987 (with NLSIU Bangalore as the first) created the modern Indian legal-education model that combines undergraduate-LLB-with-rigorous-academic-foundations. The Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) is the principal NLU admission exam. Indian-origin legal scholars have substantial global-law influence through Upendra Baxi, Nani Palkhivala, Fali Nariman, and the contemporary scholarship in international law, constitutional law, and post-colonial legal theory.\n\nMajor legal subdisciplines and specialisations: constitutional law (the foundational study of constitutional structure and rights); contract law; tort law; property law; criminal law and criminal procedure; civil procedure; administrative law; corporate law and securities regulation; tax law (with international tax law as an increasingly important specialty given OECD-Pillar-1-and-Pillar-2 reforms); international law (public international law, private international law, international economic law, international human rights law, international humanitarian law); international trade and WTO law (directly relevant to AJG's trade-intelligence vertical); international investment law and ISDS; intellectual property law (patents, trademarks, copyright, trade secrets, geographical indications); environmental law; energy law; cyber law and information-technology law; data-protection-and-privacy law (GDPR, CCPA, India's DPDP Act 2023); legal philosophy and jurisprudence; legal history; comparative law; alternative dispute resolution and arbitration. The post-2018 emergence of dedicated AI-and-law programs and the rapidly-expanding climate-and-environmental-law specialty reflect contemporary curriculum evolution.\n\nFor a globally-mobile professional, the legal-credential structure is more strongly jurisdiction-specific than most other professional fields. The US JD is the principal practice-credential in the US; the UK LLB plus LPC plus training-contract pathway prepares solicitors; the bar examination and SQE replaced the LPC in 2021; the European Bologna-aligned 5-year integrated law programs followed by national bar admission; the Indian LLB-from-NLU plus All India Bar Examination plus state-bar-council registration; the Singapore Part A and Part B examinations for foreign-trained lawyers; the Hong Kong PCLL pathway. The LLM (Master of Laws) is the principal cross-jurisdictional graduate credential and is heavily international student-populated at most major US-and-UK law schools. Career destinations span private legal practice (the Magic Circle, White Shoe, Big Indian, Big Singapore, Big Asian, plus mid-tier and boutique firms), in-house counsel positions at major corporates, government legal-service positions, the judiciary, multilateral institutions (UN, ICJ, ICC, WTO Appellate Body alumni positions, IMF Legal Department), academic-faculty positions, and the increasingly substantial alternative-legal-services-providers and legal-tech ecosystem.
Library categories most relevant to Law, ranked by topical overlap.
- Law Firms
Magic Circle, Silver Circle, AmLaw 100, national tier-1 law firms by jurisdiction.
Relevance score: 10 - Bilateral Investment Treaties
BITs — foreign investor protection, ISDS availability, notable cases, termination status.
Relevance score: 8 - Library: Countries
Deep factsheets on 197 countries — economic, legal, trade, cultural, logistical.
Relevance score: 6 - Library: FTAs
273 Free Trade Agreements documented — qualification, benefits, rules of origin.
Relevance score: 6 - Library: Arbitration Centers
Complete registry of commercial arbitration centers globally with rules and case caseload.
Relevance score: 6 - Library: Speakers Bureaus
Professional speaker bureaus for trade, economics, policy, geopolitics topics.
Relevance score: 6 - Library: Cities
City intelligence — 2,398 cities across 204 countries with tier-matched depth.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Corridors
37 major trade corridors — IMEC, BRI, Northern Distribution Network, Pacific trade routes.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Regulators
Global directory of financial, trade, telecom, competition, data, health regulators.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Trade Blocs
28 major trade blocs — EU, ASEAN, USMCA, MERCOSUR, AfCFTA, RCEP, CPTPP.
Relevance score: 4 - Consulting Firms
MBB + Big-4 + tier-2 consulting presence by city and industry specialization.
Relevance score: 4 - Industry Bodies
Sector-specific trade associations — PHARMEXCIL, GJEPC, CHEMEXCIL, AEPC, EEPC.
Relevance score: 4 - International Banks
Tier-1 international banks by country with correspondent-network depth and expat access.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Central Banks
Complete list of central banks globally with websites, contact, governance structure.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Data Regulators
Data protection authorities — ICO UK, CNIL France, BfDI Germany, ODPC Kenya, etc.
Relevance score: 4 - SEZ Directory
Special Economic Zones globally — qualifying industries, incentives, locations.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: HS Codes
Harmonized System codes 1-97 with sub-heading depth — the primary tariff classification reference.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Lexicon
Trade and commerce lexicon — precise definitions of the terminology in use.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Sub-Verticals
2,254 sub-verticals across commerce — goods (HS 1-97) and services (GATS/CPC).
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Tools
15 free tools — duty calculator, Incoterms picker, FTA eligibility, RoO tester, costing, and more.
Relevance score: 2
13,940 reference PDFs
The full AJG Library contains 13,940 primary-source reference PDFs across regulations, trade policy, central bank reports, tariff schedules, and more. Browse all →
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