University of Zululand Faculty Of Law Vacancies
Employment opportunities citing typical employers
The legal profession hosts a variety of career paths that a graduate can choose from. The graduate can choose between becoming an academic, an attorney, an advocate, a legal adviser, a state prosecutor, a state advocate or even join the judiciary.
Typical employers will be the National Prosecuting Authority, the Justice Centres, SARS and the private firms of attorneys and other organisations like KPMG. Further once the graduate is an admitted attorney or advocate he/she can very well choose to open their own practice.
Entrepreneurial opportunities
The legal profession offers entrepreneurial opportunities in that as an admitted attorney you register your own firm and specialise in fields of law in which you are an expert. You may set up a firm in which you will employ other attorneys as professional assistants and candidate attorneys.
Vertical articulation for further / higher degree studies where applicable
The programme is designed to be sufficient for students who wish to proceed to masters and doctoral degrees, and in this way obtain the kind of depth that will make them attractive as professionals and knowledge workers to work as researchers in public and private sector entities, and as academics at the universities.
Horizontal articulation with other qualifications where applicable
The programme is also well positioned to articulate horizontally to B-Comm, Business Management, Human Resources and Political Science in South Africa.
Head of Department
Kanagie Naidoo (B-Proc, UKZN HOWARD COLLEGE; LLM, UNISA; Admitted Attorney of the High Court of South Africa)
Email: Naidooka@unizulu.ac.za
Tel: 035 902 6213
The Department of Law offers the four year LLB degree. The programme has been designed in line with national norms and standards. This degree is the minimum qualification for any career in law, be it public prosecutor, magistrate, judge, law advisor, attorney or advocate.
To become an attorney, a person must, after completion of the degree, attend the School for Legal Practice and/or serve articles of clerkship in an attorney’s office, and pass the profession’s prescribed practical examinations. In order to formally practise as an advocate, a person must join one of the Bar Associations. A person holding the LLB degree must firstly apply to be admitted as an advocate by the High Court of South Africa, and thereafter complete a term of pupillage and pass the Bar Council’s practical examination.