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Popular destinations for NLU students seem to be the Graduate Institute Geneva, Sciences Po Paris, Bucerius Law School Germany. More names welcome.
KU Leueven and Leiden for tax
CEU for Comparative Constitution
Goethe ILF for Law and Finance
ISDE for Sports Law
Turin WIPO for IPR
Not a university. Its a research institute which houses post-graduates/post-docs/researchers working on different projects.
Erasmus University Rotterdam and University of Amsterdam for critical international law; Leiden and Graduate Institute Geneva for classical international law.

Geneva Academy for International Humanitarian Law.

Sciences Po and the MIDS Geneva programmes for International Arbitration.
What are the career opportunities one can pursue following these Euro LLMs, firstly in terms of settling in these countries (how likely is that) and if not what opportunities do they provide in India. I'm particularly asking since these seem to be Civil as opposed to common law jurisdictions, will this have impact on the above mentioned questions?
European LLMs act more like a 6th year of BALLB partying for rich kids or breathing year for 2/3 PQE burned out associates. There's no other thing it can be. You're not getting a work visa, so come back and either join the rat race again, or teach at Jindal.
Almost all the 1 year foreign LLMs are like that. If you really want to study, then you can do so and then go ahead for a PhD even. If you don't want to, then you don't have to. They are inviting us over to get our money, plain and simple.
European PhDs are full-time paid jobs with salary and perks regulated as per civil service regulations (like any other academic staff at universities, e.g. ((Assistant/Associate)) Professors). The LL.M. scene is very different from the PhD scene - an European PhD is extremely competitive therefore.