Final year HNLU guy, visited RGNUL for seminar and have few connections over there.
as a CSE aspirants I would prioritize a conducive environment and a quiet space than my law degree.
- although HNLU allots decent single rooms for PG students, RGNUL still has better hostel facilities with AC rooms ( if they allot one) with multiple canteens.
- comparing reading halls, unlike RGNUL, HNLU has capacity and more offers compartmentalized work desks.
- coming to academic prestige, yes HNLU is fairly better, However that wont matter much once you crack CSE. plus international law would suited better for your preparations, so i would choose RGNUL.
I am torn between the two. I am not doing an LLM for placement, merely to gain knowledge while I prepare for the civil services. I like the infra in RGNUL better, but HNLU has greater brand value, so if I say no to HNLU and go after RGNUL, I feel like I would be throwing away a golden goose. But at the same time, I have an interest in international law, which is there in RGNUL and not in HNLU. So I guess in the end it comes down to comfort vs prestige? Or which would be more conducive for my UPSC preparations?
as a CSE aspirants I would prioritize a conducive environment and a quiet space than my law degree.
- although HNLU allots decent single rooms for PG students, RGNUL still has better hostel facilities with AC rooms ( if they allot one) with multiple canteens.
- comparing reading halls, unlike RGNUL, HNLU has capacity and more offers compartmentalized work desks.
- coming to academic prestige, yes HNLU is fairly better, However that wont matter much once you crack CSE. plus international law would suited better for your preparations, so i would choose RGNUL.
Books padho.
Don't give bullsh*t reasoning.