Graduation Requirements

Credit Hours
In order to receive an LL.M. in Bankruptcy degree, students will be required to complete thirty credit hours composed of twenty-four credit hours of substantive courses and two "Advanced Research Seminars" (three credits each) in connection with which the student will prepare a major publishable thesis. A minimum 3.0 GPA is required for graduation.

Thesis Preparation
The Advanced Research Seminar will meet periodically during the semester to review the student’s progress in the research and writing of the thesis and to provide feedback. Students attending each seminar will be required to comment on, question and understand the complexities of each other’s work. Additional sessions devoted to American research and writing techniques may be scheduled for students who did not receive their first law degree from a United States law school or who otherwise are not familiar with American research and writing. Between sessions of the seminar, students will meet individually with the thesis professor to review progress in the thesis. Drafts of the thesis will be reviewed by a mentor who is an expert in the discrete area covered by the thesis. Students will be required to defend the thesis orally before bankruptcy experts. Each thesis will be a minimum of 50 typewritten pages including footnotes. Students are expected to complete and defend the thesis by the end of the term in which they complete twenty-four substantive course credits.

Length of Program
The program must be completed within four years.  Full-time students complete the program in one year and part-time students typically complete the program in two to three years.  Students must register for maintaining matriculation and pay a maintaining matriculation fee for each semester in wich they are not registered for classes.  A student who fails to register for maintianing matriculation and pay the fee will be dismissed from the program.

Prerequisite
The Director of the LL.M. in Bankruptcy Program may require students who have not taken a basic U.S. Bankruptcy or Creditor’s Rights course to take the Creditor’s Rights course at St. John’s as part of their LL.M. coursework.

Required Courses
Students who have taken a required or elective course, or a similar course, in preparation for the J.D. degree, may not take such a course in connection with the LL.M. program. A required course may be waived for students with significant experience in the subject matter of a particular course. Where a required course is not taken, a suitable substitute elective will be selected by the student subject to approval by the Associate Dean for Bankruptcy Studies.