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<title>UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.? - LLM GUIDE Discussion Board</title>
<link>http://www.llm-guide.com/board/48669</link>
<language>en</language> 
<description>UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.? - LLM GUIDE Discussion Board</description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 24 Jun 2008 20:03:00 +0200</pubDate>
<title>laurenced: UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.?</title>
<link>http://www.llm-guide.com/board/48669/last#48669</link> 
<description>Hi all

I&#39;m considering a LL.M. in the US in academic year 2009/10.  I&#39;ve been researching US law schools, but my fundamental obstacle is funding.

At present I plan to apply for the Kennedy and Knox scholarships.  I have missed the Fulbright deadline so that isn&#39;t an option.  But beyond the two I&#39;ve mentioned, I don&#39;t see any other way to fund US studies which is all-inclusive.

I could very much be wrong, however.  I feel like I&#39;m flying blind.

If anyone has any advice/experiences they could share with me I would really appreciate it.

Thanks,

-Laurence</description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jun 2008 13:47:00 +0200</pubDate>
<title>Shqipe: UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.?</title>
<link>http://www.llm-guide.com/board/48669/last#48690</link> 
<description>Some universities will offer scolarships or partial fees for an outstanding student.  NYU has some brilliant scolarships, Virginia, Columbia as well. Harvard is interesting - your application is made without taking into consideration whether you can afford the course, then afterwards they provide you some scolarship assistance and a combination of a loan etc in order to meet the needs - the point is everyone who gets admitted one way or another will be provided the right money to finish the course.
If no scolarship (they are hard to get) consider a loan. NYU offers loans as well with Citibank, it is a speciall arrangement called citiassist to which i personally have applied although i dont know yet whehter it will be granted. As a UK student (i suppose a British citizen with a good credit rating) i dont doubt you would get this.  It however is capped at $40000 so it will almost cover your fees (this year they have gone up to 42.000$). Other universities do too but keep checking their websites and you will find out.</description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 01:42:00 +0200</pubDate>
<title>DanE: UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.?</title>
<link>http://www.llm-guide.com/board/48669/last#48730</link> 
<description>If you&#39;re at Cambridge i think you&#39;re elligible for a Henry fellowship, terms similar to the Kennedy. There&#39;s also the Choate (again Cambridge), and i think there&#39;s something called the Proctor to Princeton (again i think). If i recall correctly there is also one to Penn law school: about 5 minutes on google should sort you out: ultimately it&#39;s fairly sparse pickings- i don&#39;t think the Knox is offered to law students very often (LL.M. is a lot more expensive than sending out fellows) </description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 04:11:00 +0200</pubDate>
<title>R.a.j: UK student - how do I fund a US LL.M.?</title>
<link>http://www.llm-guide.com/board/48669/last#48734</link> 
<description>Consider applying for the Dworkin scholarship (one British student selected every year for a full scholarship to NYU).</description>
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