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Guidance for English Barristers/Solicitors Interested in Emigrating to New Zealand The "overseas lawyers" section of the home page on the New Zealand Law Society's website provides an excellent outline of the New Zealand profession, and of what is expected of foreign lawyers who are seeking to be admitted as barristers and/or solicitors in that jurisdiction: Practising Home Jurisdiction Law in NZ, To Practise as a NZ lawyer, Legal Practice in NZ, New Zealand Council of Legal Education, Employment, Immigration, Patent Attorneys, Law Schools, Contacts The following is a summary of the position. There are different requirements for those who have been in practice as a barrister or a solicitor in England and Wales and for those who have academic legal qualifications but who have not been admitted to practice. Those in the latter category should contact the Secretary of the Council for Legal Education at the address below. As to the former, the New Zealand Law Society (NZLS) generally assesses a foreign applicant's suitability to practise on the basis of (a) academic qualifications (especially the applicant's knowledge of compulsory subjects for New Zealand law students, namely Legal System, Criminal Law, the law of Torts, the law of Contracts, Property Law and Public Law, and the content of a 13 week Professional Legal Studies Course every New Zealand law student must sit prior to admission), (b) the nature and extent of professional training, (c) the nature and extent of professional experience and (d) a consideration of whether the education, training and experience of the candidate is similar to that of New Zealand educated candidates for admission to the profession. An applicant must provide:
An overseas applicant may be required to complete all or some of the subjects for a New Zealand LLB, and or the Professional Legal Studies Course or to show proficiency in the English language. An applicant should expect that the application could take 2 - 3 months or longer to deal with. Applications for admission as a barrister and/or solicitor of the High Court New Zealand should be sent to:
Those without any background in practice should write to:
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