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To practice law in the courts of any State or other
jurisdiction, a person must be licensed, or admitted
to its bar, under rules established by the jurisdiction’s
highest court. All States require that applicants
for admission to the bar pass a written bar examination;
most jurisdictions also require applicants to pass
a separate written ethics examination. Lawyers who
have been admitted to the bar in one jurisdiction
occasionally may be admitted to the bar in another
without taking an examination if they meet the latter
jurisdiction’s standards of good moral character
and have a specified period of legal experience.
Federal courts and agencies set their own qualifications
for those practicing before or in them.
To qualify for the bar examination in most States,
an applicant usually must earn a college degree
and graduate from a law school accredited by the
American Bar Association (ABA) or the proper State
authorities. ABA accreditation signifies that the
law school—particularly its library and faculty—meets
certain standards developed to promote quality legal
education. ABA currently accredits 188 law schools;
others are approved by State authorities only. With
certain exceptions, graduates of schools not approved
by the ABA are restricted to taking the bar examination
and practicing in the State or other jurisdiction
in which the school is located; most of these schools
are in California. In 2002, eight States accepted
the study of law in a law office as qualification
for taking the bar examination; three jurisdictions—California,
the District of Columbia, and New Mexico—now accept
the study of law by correspondence. Several States
require registration and approval of students by
the State Board of Law Examiners, either before
the students enter law school or during their early
years of legal study.
Although there is no nationwide bar examination,
48 States, the District of Columbia, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
require the 6-hour Multistate Bar Examination (MBE)
as part of the overall bar examination; the MBE
is not required in Louisiana and Washington. The
MBE covers issues of broad interest, and sometimes
a locally prepared State bar examination is given
in addition to the MBE. The 3-hour Multistate Essay
Examination (MEE) is used as part of the bar examination
in several States. States vary in their use of MBE
and MEE scores.
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