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The licentiate degree was reintroduced in 1955 at the Faculty of Law (lic.jur.) and was awarded until 2003. It corresponds to a PhD degree. Prior to the Bologna Process, the degree system at the University of Oslo Faculty of Law mirrored that of the University of Copenhagen, and Denmark in general. In Denmark, both the dr.jur. degree and the ph ...
From 1811 to 1980, the faculty educated all lawyers of Norway, and still educates around 75% of new legal candidates. Its alumni hence includes the vast majority of the country's preeminent legal professionals, including academics, supreme court justices, senior civil servants, and a large number of politicians, among them 11 Prime Ministers and many cabinet ministers.
Pages in category "Academic staff of the Faculty of Law, University of Oslo" The following 55 pages are in this category, out of 55 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Faculty of Law at the University of Oslo is therefore often considered the country's only first-tier law faculty. [4] From 1980, the University of Bergen and the University of Tromsø also established law faculties and started to offer legal education. Admission is also very competitive, albeit somewhat behind the University of Oslo, with ...
Academic staff of the Faculty of Law, University of Oslo (55 P) N. Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies people (18 P)
Its faculties include theology (with the Lutheran Church of Norway having been Norway's state church since 1536), law, medicine, humanities, mathematics, natural sciences, social sciences, dentistry, and education. The university's original neoclassical campus is located in the centre of Oslo; it is currently occupied by the Faculty of Law.
In 1981, he became research fellow at the Faculty of Law. He was an advocate (barrister) at the Office of the Attorney General of Norway 1990–1992. Since 1993, he has been professor of law at the University of Oslo, first at the Department of Sociology of Law, then at the Centre for European Law, and since 2002 at the Department of Private ...
Eivind Smith (born 4 December 1949) is a Norwegian jurist and professor of law. He was born in Bærum, and took the dr.juris degree in 1979. Since 1986, he has been Professor of Law at the Faculty of Law, University of Oslo. [1] He is a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. [2]