Joining the judiciary on the mainland
By , on December 30th, 2012
<!– google_ad_section_start –> Becoming a judge in Hong Kong and on the mainland are two very different things. Over the border, law graduates take two separate training paths to be judges or lawyers. Any Chinese citizen who is over 23, has a postgraduate degree in law, has passed the civil service and judicial exams and, by unwritten rule, is a Communist Party member can become a judge after a one-year traineeship. <!– google_ad_section_end –>
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Joining the judiciary on the mainland
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Joining the judiciary on the mainland
<!– google_ad_section_start –> Becoming a judge in Hong Kong and on the mainland are two very different things. Over the border, law graduates take two separate training paths to be judges or lawyers. Any Chinese citizen who is over 23, has a postgraduate degree in law, has passed the civil service and judicial exams and, by unwritten rule, is a Communist Party member can become a judge after a one-year traineeship. <!– google_ad_section_end –>
Here is the original post:
Joining the judiciary on the mainland
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