I would consider Leiden, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Tilburg and Masstricht to be equal. The Dutch institutions are all really really good (consistently come in the top 100 in various world rankings), and they are considered equivalent in the Dutch labour market as well.
Bucerius, Frankfurt, Humboldt-Berlin, LU-Munich, Heidelberg, Hamburg, Sciences Po, the Graduate Institute, Leiden, Amsterdam, Tilburg, CEU , Stockholm, Lund, Upsala, Leuven ESADE, Turin, Bologna and Bocconi are among the top EU colleges for an LLM.
In terms of working after an LLM, an EU student visa gives you access to a large number of countries and the chances of residency are high. English is the language spoken in all MNCs, but make a little bit of effort to learn the local language.
I know Indian lawyers who have studied in the EU and are now well settled there.
Curious to know if anyone has any experience of it. My key questions are:
- Job prospects after the course. In the brochure the testimonials are from European, Chinese, Russian, and South American graduates working for international law firms and MNCs, as well as recruiters from these places who hire Bucerius graduates. But what about Indians? Are Indians less in demand than European, Chinese, Russian and South American grads?
In terms of working after an LLM, an EU student visa gives you access to a large number of countries and the chances of residency are high. English is the language spoken in all MNCs, but make a little bit of effort to learn the local language.
I know Indian lawyers who have studied in the EU and are now well settled there.
- Job prospects after the course. In the brochure the testimonials are from European, Chinese, Russian, and South American graduates working for international law firms and MNCs, as well as recruiters from these places who hire Bucerius graduates. But what about Indians? Are Indians less in demand than European, Chinese, Russian and South American grads?
- Course content
- Experience of studying in Germany and Hamburg