To be eligible for direct admission to the Two-Year Programme, applicants must be in possession of an approved qualification. The approved qualifications are:
- An LLB degree from the University of the West Indies:
- An LLB degree from the University of Guyana provided that:
- The holder of the degree is a national of Guyana
- The degree was awarded in 1998 or afterwards
- The holder is included in the list of 25 graduates provided to the Council of Legal Education
Persons not qualified at i) and ii) above who wish to be considered for admission, and who are in possession of the following qualification must sit the annual entrance examination conducted by the Council of Legal Education:
- a first degree in law awarded by a university in a common law jurisdiction;
- the Common Professional Examination Certificate (UK) together with vocational training;
- an LLB degree awarded by the University of Guyana to:
- (a) non-nationals of Guyana;
- (b) nationals of Guyana not included in the list of 25 graduates provided by the Council of Legal Education;
- (c) all persons awarded the law degree prior to 1998
The Law Schools are zoned for the admission of students from the participating territories of the West Indies. Application for entry to the Norman Manley Law School shall be made by persons ordinarily resident in Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Jamaica, Montserrat and St. Kitts and Nevis. Applications from the other territories should be made to the Hugh Wooding Law School and the Eugene Dupuch Law School.
Notwithstanding this, the Principal may admit in exceptional circumstances, a student zoned for the Hugh Wooding Law School or the Eugene Dupuch Law School.
Six-Month Programme- Eligibility Criteria
An applicant for admission to the Six-Month programme must:
- have obtained a degree of a University or institution which is recognized by the Council as being equivalent to the degree of Bachelor of Laws of the University of the West Indies; and
- hold either:
- a qualification which had it been obtained prior to 1st October, 1972, would have been recognized by all of the participating territories as a qualification to be admitted to practise as a barrister or solicitor in those territories; or
- a qualification obtained in a common law jurisdiction for admission to practise law in that jurisdiction and which qualification is approved by the Council; and
- furnish a certificate of good standing from the competent authority in the jurisdiction where he/she has been admitted to practice.