National Law Universities Explained

National Law Universities (NLU) are public law schools in India, founded pursuant to the second-generation reforms for legal education sought to be implemented by the Bar Council of India.[1] [2] The first NLU was the National Law School of India University aka NLS/NLU Bangalore which admitted its first batch in 1988. Since then, most of the states in India have NLUs. Currently there are 27 NLUs across the country out of which one is an off-centre campus of NLU Gandhinagar, GNLU SILVASSA Campus. Since the inception of NLUs, these law schools have continuously been ranked as India's most and world's one of the most prestigious and premier law schools by various agencies and are also referred as IITs of Legal Education.[3] [4]

The admissions to these universities is conducted through the Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) except in the case of National Law University, Delhi, which admits students through its own entrance examination named as All India Law Entrance Test (AILET). NLU Meghalaya also has its own admission / entrance test it is anticipated that in the coming years AILET and NLU Meghalaya's separate tests will be merged into CLAT. Admission to the NLUs is extremely competitive with an acceptance rate as low as 2% to 3% in case of CLAT and approx 0.50% via AILET. CLAT which is also known as the main gateway to NLUs has been ranked as one of the top five toughest entrance examinations in India.

NLUs have Chief Justice of India (CJI) and various Chief Justices of Respective High Courts as their Chancellors and visiting professors. Many retired judges and bureaucrats are also here as permanent faculty and Vice-Chancellors.

History

Traditionally legal education in India was conducted through the medium of non-specialized universities of India which granted law degrees like any other graduate degree. These universities referred and taught the curriculum prescribed by the Bar Council of India, but since they were under the overall control and supervision of the University Grants Commission, therefore it was not possible for the Bar Council to effectively pursue reforms in legal education.

This system continued for more than two decades with the overall legal education supervision by the Bar Council, since its establishment in terms of the Advocates Act, 1961.[5] However, there were calls for reforms from all quarters of the country in general because of the falling standards of the bar and there were mounting pressures over the Bar Council of India to change the way legal education was imparted in India.

The first concrete decision to this end was taken in 1984 when various proposals to modernize legal education were considered and approved by the Legal Education Committee of the Bar Council, in an attempt to improve legal education throughout India. One major proposal was the decision to establish specialized institutions to impart legal education in an integrated and diversified manner. The aim was to revitalize the legal profession by making law an attractive profession and making it competitive to attract talent, which was hitherto diverted to other professional areas such as medicine and engineering.

Structure

In contrast with the existing pattern of legal education in India, the proposed autonomous law schools varied in structural design and in various other respects. Some of these can be identified through the characteristics they carry:

List of National Law Universities [NLUs]

!No.!NIRF ranking!Institute!Abbreviation!Established!City!State/UT
11National Law School of India UniversityNLSIU 1986BengaluruKarnataka
218National Law Institute UniversityNLIU1997BhopalMadhya Pradesh
33National Academy of Legal Studies and ResearchNALSAR1998HyderabadTelangana
44West Bengal National University of Juridical SciencesWBNUJS1999KolkataWest Bengal
5--National Law University JodhpurNLUJ1999JodhpurRajasthan
67Gujarat National Law UniversityGNLU2003GandhinagarGujarat
7--Hidayatullah National Law UniversityHNLU2003Naya RaipurChhattisgarh
821Dr. Ram Manohar Lohiya National Law UniversityRMLNLU2005LucknowUttar Pradesh
9--National University of Advanced Legal StudiesNUALS2005KochiKerala
1020Rajiv Gandhi National University of LawRGNUL2006PatialaPunjab
11--Chanakya National Law UniversityCNLU2006PatnaBihar
122National Law University DelhiNLUD2008New DelhiDelhi
13--Damodaram Sanjivayya National Law UniversityDSNLU2008VisakhapatnamAndhra Pradesh
1430National Law University OdishaNLUO2009CuttackOdisha
1524National University of Study and Research in LawNUSRL2010RanchiJharkhand
1628National Law University and Judicial AcademyNLUJA2009 GuwahatiAssam
17--Tamil Nadu National Law UniversityTNNLU2012TiruchirapalliTamil Nadu
18--Maharashtra National Law University MumbaiMNLUM2014MumbaiMaharashtra
19--Maharashtra National Law University NagpurMNLUN2016NagpurMaharashtra
20--Himachal Pradesh National Law UniversityHPNLU2016ShimlaHimachal Pradesh
21--Maharashtra National Law University, AurangabadMNLUA2017AurangabadMaharashtra
22--Dharmashastra National Law UniversityDNLU2018JabalpurMadhya Pradesh
23--Dr. B.R. Ambedkar National Law UniversityDBRANLU2012 SonipatHaryana
24--National Law University TripuraNLUT2022 AgartalaTripura
25--Gujarat National Law University, Silvassa CampusGNLUS2023SilvassaDadra and Nagar Haveli, and Daman and Diu
26--National Law University MeghalayaNLU Meg2023ShillongMeghalaya
27--Dr. Rajendra Prasad National Law UniversityRPNLU2024PrayagrajUttar Pradesh

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: India's Top National Law Universities (NLUs). 2021-06-18. www.lawentrance.com.
  2. Web site: What are NLUs (National Law Universities)? How are these Different from Other Law Schools. 2022-01-08. www.shiksha.com.
  3. Web site: India's Best Law Colleges 2019 . India Today . 28 March 2020.
  4. Web site: 2023 . NIRF Law school ranking . National Institutional Ranking Framework . Ministry of Education, Government of India.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20080819185257/http://barcouncilofindia.nic.in/disk1/196125.pdf Advocates Act, 1961