The National Unified Legal Professional Qualification Examination,[1] commonly abbreviated as Legal Exam, is the national bar examination of the People's Republic of China. This examination is administered by the Ministry of Justice. According to the law, those who serve as judges, prosecutors, lawyers, notaries, legal advisors, legal arbitrators, and those in government departments who are engaged in the review of administrative penalty decisions, administrative reconsideration, and administrative rulings are required to pass the legal professional qualification examination.[2] [3]
Since the exam was established and first administered in 2018, the annual pass rate has remained at 10% to 15%.[4] Before the 2018 legal examination reform, the examination was known as the National Judicial Examination, which was administered annually from 2002 to 2017.[5] [6]
The legal exam is divided into objective test and subjective test. The objective test is taken first, and after successfully passing the test, candidates can take the subsequent subjective test.
The objective test is divided into Paper 1 and Paper 2. The test subjects are:
The subjective examination consists of One paper. The main subjects are: socialist legal theory with Chinese characteristics, jurisprudence, constitution, criminal law, criminal procedure law, civil law, commercial law, civil procedure law (including arbitration system), administrative law and administrative procedure law, judicial system and legal professional ethics.
The legal examination implements a national unified proposition. The range of propositions is based on the "National Unified Legal Professional Qualification Examination Outline" formulated and published by the Ministry of Justice of the People's Republic of China.
The objective test takes the form of a closed-book, computerized examination. The computerized examination questions, answer requirements and answer interface are all displayed on the computer display screen. Candidates should use the computer mouse or keyboard to answer directly on the computer answering interface.
The subjective examination is based on the principle of computerized examination and is equipped with an electronic compilation of laws and regulations. Candidates who find it difficult to take computer exams due to health, age, or other reasons may apply to use paper-and-pencil answering methods when confirming their registration to take the subjective exam; the test questions and answer requirements are displayed on the computer display screen, and the test takers answer on the answer sheet.
For legal examinations organized in ethnic autonomous areas, test papers in ethnic minority languages may be used for the examination.
The objective test exam consists of two papers. It is divided into Paper 1 and Paper 2. Each paper has 100 questions and is worth 150 points. There are 50 single-choice questions, worth 1 point each, and a total of 50 multiple-choice and indefinite-choice questions, worth 2 points each. The total score of the two papers is 300 points.
The subjective test is one paper, including case analysis questions, legal document questions, essay questions and other types of questions. The total score is 180 points.