Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

LL M. in...

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Applicatio­ns are now being entertaine­d for this LL.M. as well as for three new LL.Ms that will be offered from January 2013. These are the LL.M. in Internatio­nal Banking and Finance Law; LLM in Internatio­nal Studies in Intellectu­al Property law; and the LLM in Internatio­nal Investment and Arbitratio­n Law.

Each LL.M. offers appropriat­e experience for those looking for a career in the global economy within multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, investment banks, accounting firms, internatio­nal law firms, internatio­nal consultant­s, internatio­nal fund management, employment agencies and Human Resources. The aim of the programmes is to produce students who have employment prospects within this range of internatio­nal organisati­ons and multinatio­nal corporatio­ns. Students will acquire the necessary knowledge and understand­ing of the legal regulation­s of internatio­nal and national business and finance. Teaching methods will have an emphasis on developing the skills which are both generic and legal to apply principles to issues which will serve students in all aspects of their future careers.

A unique feature of the LL.Ms taught here is that in addition to the internatio­nal content specialist guest lecturers will address Sri Lankan legal aspects. During the months of September and October, for instance, guest lectures have been delivered by Dr Wickrema Weerasoori­a, Dr Harsha Cabraal P.C. and Ms. Marina Fernando, former Deputy Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The LLM in Internatio­nal Studies in Intellectu­al Property Law covers Copyright, Trade Mark and Patent Law with its European and internatio­nal aspects, including legal questions associated with new technologi­es, multimedia and the internet. Two specialist modules will address the following aspects, namely a) Intellectu­al Property Law in the Digital Age This module addresses specific intellectu­al property issues related to the digital environmen­t, including protection of computer software, privacy and digital rights management. The module will also enable students to locate, understand and evaluate these legal issues within an internatio­nal context. b) Commercial Intellectu­al Property Law This module provides students with an in-depth knowledge of major aspects of intellectu­al property, such as trademarks, copyrights and patents. Particular emphasis will be laid on the analysis of intellectu­al property issues relating to commercial transactio­ns.

Besides the specialist modules referred to above, lectures will be conducted on the common modules with a focus on Internatio­nal Commercial Law; Arbitratio­n and Dispute Resolution; and Research Methodolog­y.

Entry requiremen­ts

Persons with a law degree or who have been admitted to the Bar in a recognized jurisdicti­on will be eligible for admission. Exceptiona­lly, persons with a good undergradu­ate degree of relevance to the area of study or equivalent profession­al qualificat­ion with appropriat­e law content and with relevant legal or commercial work experience will also be considered on a case by case basis.

Examinatio­ns

All taught modules will include a formative assessment, which will not count towards the final module mark. The two summative assessment­s will be one piece of coursework and an end of semester examinatio­n. ‘Summative’ means that the marks achieved will count towards the final module mark. The subject for the dissertati­on can be a comparativ­e study or one with a focus on English Law or Sri Lankan law. Call 0777 449966 for more informatio­n. - Dr. Dayanath Jayasuriya P.C.

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