Legal education in the Philippines
Legal education in the Philippines is developed and offered by Philippine law schools, supervised by the Legal Education Board. Previously, the Commission on Higher Education supervises the legal education in the Philippines but was replaced by the Legal Education Board since 1993 after the enactment of Republic Act No. 7662 or the Legal Education Reform Act of 1993.
History
The legal education in the Philippines was first introduced during the Spanish occupation when, in 1734, the University of Santo Tomas established the Faculty of Civil Law. After the Malolos Constitution was ratified, the Universidad Literaria de Filipinas was established by Joaquin Gonzales in 1899; the said institution offered several courses including law. However, the Literaria's existence was short lived as a result of the eruption of the Filipino-American conflict. During the American occupation, specifically in 1911, the University of the Philippines College of Law was established, through the vision and efforts of George Malcolm. The said law institution continues to be the one of the oldest state college of law in the country.The ratification of the 1935 Constitution paved the way for the establishment of law programs in various private colleges and universities in Manila. At that time, there was hardly any kind of supervision of law schools, especially for private institutions. The Faculty of Civil Law of the University of Santo Tomas, the University of the Philippines–College of Law, the former Colegio de Ateneo de Manila and the Philippine Law School were the leading law institutions during those period. After World War II and in the contemporary time, more law schools were then established.
Legal Education Board
The Legal Education Board supervises all law schools and continuing legal education providers in the Philippines. The Board is headed by a Chairman who is a retired justice of a collegiate court. Regular members of the Board include a representative from each of the following:- Integrated Bar of the Philippines
- Philippine Association of Law Schools
- Philippine Association of Law Professors
- active law practitioners
- bona fide law students
Mandatory Continuing Legal Education
Lawyers with names appearing in the Rolls of Attorneys of the Supreme Court, unless disbarred, are all members of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines. However, to be IBP members of good standing, lawyers are required to complete, every three years, at least thirty-six hours of continuing legal education seminars approved by the Mandatory Continuing Legal Education Committee. Members who fail to comply shall pay a non-compliance fee, and shall be listed as a delinquent member.The Mandatory Continuing Legal Education Office, established by the Supreme Court, is the official government agency tasked to implement compliance with the MCLE requirement. The MCLE Office is headed by former Supreme Court Justice Carolina C. Grino-Aquino, widow of former Supreme Court Chief Justice Ramon Aquino. Its office is located at the fourth floor of the IBP Building in Ortigas Center.
Legal systems
The Philippine legal system is an amalgamation of the world's major systems. These systems include Roman civil law which was inherited from Spain; the Anglo-American common law which were derived from the laws of the United States; and Islamic law, otherwise known as the Sharia law, of the Muslim world. Private law and legal codes are substantially patterned after the civil law of Spain, while public law, including political law, is based on the Anglo-American legal system.Law degree programs
Law degree programs are considered professional/post-baccalaureate programs in the Philippines. As such, admission to law schools requires the completion of a bachelor's degree, with a sufficient number of credits or units in certain subject areas. Completion of a required course from a Philippine law school constitutes the primary eligibility requirement in order to take the Philippine Bar Examination, the national licensure examination as precursor to admission to the practice of law in the country.Legal education in the Philippines normally proceeds along the following route:
- Undergraduate education
- Law school
- Admission to the bar
- Legal practice and mandatory continuing legal education
Professional law degrees
In order to be eligible to take the bar examinations, one must complete the Juris Doctor program, which may be either the non-thesis or thesis course. Advanced degrees are offered by some law schools, but are not requirements for admission to the practice of law in the Philippines.- Bachelor of Laws – The LL.B. was the most common law degree offered and conferred by Philippine law schools. It was a standard four-year law program covering all bar exam subjects. Almost all law schools followed a standard LL.B. curriculum, wherein students are exposed to the required bar subjects. Other schools, like the University of the Philippines College of Law, allow students to substitute electives for bar review subjects offered in the fourth year of study. In December 2018, as mandated by LEB, the LL.B. program was phased out and was migrated to the J.D. non-thesis program; such migration applied retroactively to LL.B. degree holders, meaning all LL.B. degree holders were also conferred of the new migrated degree.
- Juris Doctor - The J.D. degree was developed and first conferred in the Philippines by the Ateneo Law School in 1991. The J.D. program is a four-year law program. Like the standard LL.B. program, the J.D. curriculum covers the core subjects required for the bar examinations. Unlike the LL.B., the Ateneo J.D. program requires students to finish the core bar subjects in 2 years, take elective subjects, undergo an apprenticeship, and prepare and defend a thesis. Currently, the program may be taken either with thesis or that with non-thesis.
- *Juris Doctor-Master of Business Administration, , – The J.D.-M.B.A. program is a double degree program in law and management offered at the professional-graduate level. It was introduced and is so far offered only by the La Salle-FEU MBA-JD Program, a consortium of Far Eastern University Institute of Law and De La Salle Graduate School of Business. Under this program, the requirements of the J.D. and M.B.A. programs are satisfied by the taking of concurrent units of study, allowing students to complete the program in five instead of six years.
Graduate law degrees
- Master of Laws – The LL.M. is a graduate law degree offered to holders of basic law degrees. It is generally offered to law graduates and lawyers of any nationality. Six Philippine law schools so far conduct the program—the Ateneo Law School, which offers an International Master of Laws program; the University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law, which first offered the LL.M.; San Sebastian College - Recoletos Graduate School of Law; University of Manila College of Law; Manuel L. Quezon University College of Law; Central Philippine University College of Law in Consortium with San Beda College; San Beda Graduate School of Law; and PLM Graduate School of Law of the Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila. LL.M. programs were once offered by the Far Eastern University Institute of Law, the Escuela de Derecho de Manila, and the University of the Philippines College of Law but were eventually phased out due to lack of enrollment and funding.
- Doctor of Civil Law – The D.C.L. program is a doctoral program in law offered to holders of the LL.M. degree. Candidates who hold only LL.B. degrees may be admitted upon completion of prerequisite LL.M. subjects. The D.C.L. was pioneered by the University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law. Their program structure is highly similar to the D.C.L. offered in the Complutense University of Madrid. The PLM Graduate School of Law has already opened its own D.C.L. program.
- Doctor of Juridical Science – The S.J.D. or J.S.D. program is currently offered only by the San Beda Graduate School of Law. While the candidate for the degree is required some academic units, the grant of the degree relies on the candidates research output as well as his or her participation in international symposia, seminars and programs as lecturer, panel presenter or paper presenter. The candidate presents a doctoral dissertation that is argued before a Panel of Oral Examiners and then delivers a 'lectio coram' -- a lecture in the presence of legal luminaries.
Honorary law degrees
Ecclesiastical law degrees
A few Roman Catholic seminaries and graduate schools offer degree programs in canon law, an ecclesiastical program that is not required in the Philippine Bar Examinations. The University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Canon Law runs the oldest academic programs of this kind. Its Licentiate of Canon Law and Doctor of Canon Law programs are open to priests, nuns, theologians, and even to lay people. Judges of the Roman Catholic Marriage Tribunal typically hold academic degrees in the field. Degrees in canon law, strictly speaking, are not considered law degrees in the Philippines.Developments
There is a move among members of the Philippine Association of Law Schools to convert their LL.B. programs into J.D. curricula. There are currently two possible directions for the change: First, the conversion of LL.B. programs through adopting a model substantially similar to the J.D. curriculum introduced by the Ateneo de Manila Law School, and second, simply changing the name of the degree conferred from "LL.B." to "J.D." while essentially retaining the same course offerings as those in the DECS Model Law Curriculum.Admission to the practice of law
The 1987 Constitution of the Philippines has given the Supreme Court the sole power to admit individuals to the practice of law in the Philippines. This power is exercised through a Bar Examination Committee, an ad hoc academic group tasked to formulate questions, administer proceedings, grade examinations, rank candidates, and release the results of the Philippine Bar Examination.To be eligible to take the national bar exam, a candidate must be a Filipino citizen, at least twenty-one years of age, and holder of a bachelor's degree and a law degree obtained from a government recognized law school in the Philippines. Graduates of law schools from other countries must obtain a law degree from the Philippines to qualify for the Philippine Bar. In March 2010 the Supreme court issued Bar matter 1153 allowing Filipino who are foreign law graduates to take the Bar exam provided that applicant complies with the following conditions:
- completion of all courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws or its equivalent degree;
- recognition or accreditation of the law school by the proper authority;
- completion of all fourth year subjects in the Bachelor of Laws academic program in a law school duly recognized by the Philippine Government; and
- must have completed a separate bachelor's degree."
Bar examinations
For candidates intending to practice Islamic law in the Philippines, the Special Bar Exams for Shari'a Court Lawyers is given every two years. The Supreme Court Bar Office conducts the exam while the Office of Muslim Affairs determines the qualification and eligibility of candidates to the exams.
Attorneys-at-law
To be a full-fledged lawyer in the Philippines and be eligible to use the title Attorney, a candidate must graduate from a Philippine law school, take and pass the Philippine Bar Examinations, the candidate who passed the bar examinations is entitled to take and subscribe before the Supreme Court special en banc session the corresponding Attorney's Oath, as follows:The certificate to practice law will be granted by the Supreme Court after the lawyer sign his name in the Rolls of Attorneys of the Supreme Court. The full names of lawyers are found in the Rolls of Attorneys of the Supreme Court, and in a similar list included in a Supreme Court publication entitled Law List.
Philippine law schools
Starting from 2017, the Legal Education Board had started implementing the Philippine Law School Admission Test ; the failure to pass such admission test prohibits a person from enrolling to any law schools in the Philippines. It is a one-day aptitude test intended to measure the academic potential of an examinee who wishes to pursue the study of law., there are 108 law schools legitimately operating throughout the Philippines. These include independent law schools. Satellite campuses are omitted as they are considered part of a larger higher education institution.
Metro Manila
- Adamson University
- Arellano University
- Ateneo de Manila University
- Centro Escolar University
- De La Salle University
- Far Eastern University
- José Rizal University
- Lyceum of the Philippines University
- Manila Adventist College
- Manila Law College
- Manuel L. Quezon University
- New Era University
- Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila
- Philippine Christian University
- Philippine Law School
- Polytechnic University of the Philippines
- St. Dominic Savio College
- San Beda University
- San Beda College Alabang
- San Sebastian College–Recoletos
- University of Asia and the Pacific
- University of Caloocan City
- University of the East
- University of Manila
- University of Perpetual Help System DALTA
- University of Santo Tomas
- University of the Philippines Diliman
Central Luzon
- Angeles University Foundation
- Araullo University
- Bulacan State University
- President Ramon Magsaysay State University
- Tarlac State University
- Wesleyan University Philippines
Northern Luzon
- Cagayan State University
- Cordillera College
- Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University
- Isabela State University
- Lyceum-Northwestern University
- Mariano Marcos State University
- Northeastern College
- Northwestern University
- Saint Louis College
- Saint Louis University
- Saint Mary's University
- University of Baguio
- University of Cagayan Valley
- University of Luzon
- University of Northern Philippines
- University of Pangasinan
- Virgen Milagrosa University Foundation
Calabarzon
- De La Salle Lipa
- Manuel S. Enverga University Foundation
- San Pablo Colleges
- University of Batangas
- University of Perpetual Help System JONELTA
Southern Luzon
- Aemilianum College
- Ateneo de Naga University
- Bicol College
- Bicol University
- Luna Goco Colleges
- Masbate Colleges
- Palawan State University
- Tabaco College
- University of Nueva Caceres
- University of Santo Tomas - Legazpi
Visayas
- Aklan Catholic College
- Central Philippine University
- Christ the King College
- Colegio dela Purisima Concepcion
- Dr. Vicente Orestes Romualdez Educational Foundation
- Foundation University
- Holy Name University
- Leyte Colleges
- Negros Oriental State University
- Saint Paul School of Professional Studies
- Samar College
- Silliman University
- Southwestern University
- University of Bohol
- University of Cebu
- University of the Cordilleras
- University of Eastern Philippines
- University of Iloilo
- University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos
- University of San Agustin
- University of San Carlos
- University of San Jose-Recoletos
- University of St. La Salle
- University of Southern Philippines Foundation
- University of the Visayas
Mindanao
- Andres Bonifacio College
- Ateneo de Davao University
- Ateneo de Zamboanga University
- Basilan State College
- Bukidnon State University
- Cor Jesu College
- Fr. Saturnino Urios University
- José Maria College
- Liceo de Cagayan University
- Medina College-Ozamiz
- Mindanao State University
- Misamis University
- Notre Dame University
- Pagadian Capitol College
- Philippine Advent College
- St. Mary's College of Tagum
- University of Mindanao
- University of Southeastern Philippines
- Xavier University–Ateneo de Cagayan
- Western Mindanao State University
Top performing schools
- University of the Philippines
- Ateneo de Davao University
- Ateneo de Manila University
- University of San Carlos
- Angeles University Foundation
- University of Santo Tomas
- San Beda University
- Xavier University - Ateneo de Cagayan
- University of Cebu
- Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila