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New Dual Degree Program - J.D. and
M.S.L.S/M.S.I.S. is available at UNC Chapel Hill

Law
librarians work in various legal settings, including
law schools, private
law firms, government
libraries, federal, state, and local courts, and corporations.
Many of these job environments prefer or require that librarians
have both a Masters degree in Library Science and a Law degree.
These educational requirements reflect increasing complexities
of the legal system and legal research and the greater use of
information systems. Librarians working in other settings draw
on a legal education to support research in political science,
government documents and other areas. Many librarians find that
a combined background in librarianship and law helps them manage
copyright and licensing, human resources, and general administration
issues.
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
is home to both the
top rated school of information and library science
and one of the top
rated public law schools in the country. These two schools
have joined forces to create a program
where the J.D. and M.S.L.S or M.S.I.S. degrees may be earned in
four years by enrollment in either one of dual degree programs
offered by the School of Law and the School of Information and
Library Science. Admission to each school must be gained independently
and all of the core courses and degree requirements for the J.D.
and for the M.S.L.S. or the M.S.I.S. must be met for dual degrees
to be awarded.
For the program's first
year, candidates must take the complete, prescribed first-year
curriculum
in either Law or Library and Information Science, and, in the
second year, that of the other school. The third and fourth years
consist of prescribed and elective courses in both schools. The
J.D. and one of the master's degrees can be completed in 113 semester
hours, with a minimum of 74 credits drawn from Law courses and
a minimum of 39 credits from Information and Library Science courses.
Further information is available from Steven Melamut, by email
or by phone 919-962-1195.
Visit the home pages of the Carolina
School of Law and the UNC
School of Information and Library Science for additional
information about the schools. See the American Association of
Law Libraries site for more information about Education
For a Career in Law Librarianship and related
links.
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