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You might get different answers, but if you take the pain of checking out the actual numbers for different years you'll find it's always NALSAR.
No it isn’t. It has always been NLS. And then NUJS. NALSAR is so overrated.
Yeah, get NLS to release placement data for the last 5 years and then check your own delusion.
NLUD is in a league that’s beyond these 3 state NLUs. There is no comparison.
NUJS>NALSAR>NLSIU>NLIU/GNLU>NLUD>NLUJ. This is based on 2023 and 2024.
Lol, NLIU and GNLU are definitely not above either NLUD or NLUJ. The former two places have mostly low-paying firms coming to recruit and also have much larger batch sizes.
Firms that have recruited from NLIU for 2024 Batch - SAM, CAM, AZB & Partners, Khaitan, Trilegal, Saraf & Partners, Luthra, IndusLaw, ICUL, ICICI, Desai & Diwanji, BPCL, Jio Financial etc. May I know which of them are low-paying?
NLUD trolls like to fantasize about other's placements, don't pay them any heed.
U cannot single out one single NLU which provides the best every year. Overall NLS, Nalsar, NUJS more or less have the same placement stats. The second tier after that would be NLUJ, GNLU, NLUD and NLIU.
NUJS is a Tier 2 because you can't beat its grads anywhere in the real world? It has produced three Rhodes scholars during this period that you speak of.
On absolute raw placements terms, NUJS>GNLU>NLS>NALSAR>NLUJ>NLUD

differs in percentage batch-strength wise though
1. NUJS - 70+(ppo’s included) for 2024 batch

2. GNLU - 60+

3. NLSIU - 40+

4. NLUJ - 40+

5. Nalsar - 30+

2023 was heavily inflated for all law schools.
I can't speak about other NLUs because I haven't been there, and honestly, recruitment is something that only people from the college can talk about. Rest is just CLAT/AILET students who have heard it from a bhaiya or didi in these colleges. Or such kids who are now at these colleges.

I am from NLUD, and here is the truth:

The placement was excellent for batch of 2022 and 2023, and this is a truth shared across law schools. But, placements for the batch of 2024 took a massive hit, initially that is. The Day Z was a bloodbath.

Shock, Panic, and Fear are the only words that can best describe the atmosphere on campus back then.

But, here is where the fact that it was NLUD and not any other college, matters. Bajpai (the swashbuckling VC lol who has some very good connections) and some other Professors took it upon themselves to get these kids placed. They pulled strings, had discussions with recruiters, and finally got more opportunities for more people in the batch of 2024.

The end result?

The damage wasn't as bad as people were expecting, but it wasn't anywhere close to the kind of placements people expect. Where does the blame lie? Mostly on the market conditions and some bit on the RCC of that batch.

But how are things looking now for the batch of 2025 and onwards?

Really good. NLUD has been making some great moves. In the past one month it has signed MoUs for exchanged, research, etc. with multiple foreign universities such as King's College London, University of Sydney, SOAS, etc. In fact, there is going to be a pathways program with SOAS which will let NLUD kids get entry into SOAS for an LLM right after the completion of their degree. Pretty sweet.

and the Rhodes and Jessup Nationals win just adds to the sweetness.

Big ups NLUD!
So you started talking about placements and ended up highlighting things which have got nothing to do with placements. As for that pathways programme, any NLU grad who can afford to pay the fees of almost any law school in UK will be given a seat in their LLM programme these days. That's just the reality of the higher education scene in the UK, so the pathways programme isn't that big a deal. Instead, if the university eventually manages something that would give someone a combined degree by spending less, then it would be a good thing for the students.
Oh, give it a rest with your negativity and back-handed compliments, pal. I guarantee that if any other NLU, whether NALSAR, NLS or NUJS, had started functioning in 2008 with all the competition that NLUD had to face, NONE OF THEM would come close to what NLUD has achieved across academics, co-curriculars and placements combined.
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