How do you get in?LLB Part IAll first year law applicants apply for:• <strong>The</strong> Bachelor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>s Part IAND• Another degree programme for your non-law coursesIf you have gained the University Entrance Standard and are admitted toanother programme at this University you will be admitted to the LLB Part I.If you are a graduate, or already enrolled in another University <strong>of</strong>Auckland bachelors programme, you will be admitted to LLB Part I.Admission to a conjoint programme with <strong>Law</strong> requires a higherentry standard.For information about the guaranteed entry scores and additional subjectrequirements, please refer to www.auckland.ac.nz/admission.Students usually take LAW 121G in Semester One. If you gain a C+ orbetter in LAW 121G you can progress to LAW 131 in Semester Two.LLB Part IIPlaces in LLB Part II are limited and all applicants must go through aselection process. A maximum <strong>of</strong> 300 places will be available in <strong>2014</strong>for each <strong>of</strong> the LLB Part II courses. This allocation includes returningPart II students.To be considered for selection into LLB Part II in <strong>2014</strong>, applicants needto have:• Passed LAW 121G and LAW 131 (or their equivalents at anotherNew Zealand law school) with at least a C+AND• Gained at least 90 points (or the equivalent) <strong>of</strong> non-law universitydegree coursesSelection for LLB Part II is based on the grades you achieve in LLB Part I.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Law</strong> GPA for <strong>2014</strong> will be calculated from the grades for LAW 121Gand LAW 131 which will be weighted doubly, plus the best grades in theother university degree courses taken in the most recent year <strong>of</strong> full-timestudy (or most recent years <strong>of</strong> study where the most recent year wasnot full-time) amounting to 90 points. <strong>The</strong> Selection Committee meetsin late December.<strong>The</strong> overall average grade required for selection into LLB Part II can varyfrom year to year, depending on the number <strong>of</strong> applicants. In recentyears the minimum grade required has been between a B+ (GPA 6.00)and A- (GPA 7.00).Graduate AdmissionIf you are a graduate, you may be selected on the basis <strong>of</strong> your grades inLAW 121G and LAW 131, plus your best 90 points (or equivalent) fromyour most recent year <strong>of</strong> university study. Alternatively, if youdemonstrate legal aptitude (eg, by having a good LSAT score) you canapply for admission to LLB Part I and LLB Part II concurrently. Graduatesshould consult one <strong>of</strong> the student advisers in the <strong>Faculty</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>.Phone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 87939Targeted admission schemesTargeted admission schemes exist for Māori students, for indigenousPacific residents and for disabled students.If you are a Māori student, an indigenous Pacific resident or disabled,have completed LLB Part I and believe you can achieve at least a C+average, you will be encouraged to apply for LLB Part II.<strong>The</strong> Selection Committee allocates the places with consideration givento academic criteria as well as information gathered in an interview.All applicants under the targeted admission schemes must complete aseparate questionnaire available from the <strong>Faculty</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>. Māori studentsand indigenous Pacific residents must be available in mid-December2013 for an interview by a Māori or Pacific panel. Disabled students mustprovide documentary evidence <strong>of</strong> their disability. For more information,contact the relevant adviser.Pouawhina MāoriPhone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 88801Pacific Students Academic Support CoordinatorPhone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 85019Disability CoordinatorsPhone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 88808 or ext 87330International students<strong>The</strong> <strong>Faculty</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> welcomes applications to LLB Part I and LLB Part IIfrom international students. Applications can be based on qualificationsobtained outside New Zealand. International graduate applicants: referinformation under Graduate Admission.If you are an international student entering from an internationaleducation provider and English is not your first language, you will berequired to submit pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> your English language pr<strong>of</strong>iciency. This canbe in the form <strong>of</strong> an IELTS or TOEFL score. For the LLB Part I, an IELTSscore <strong>of</strong> 6.0 with no band less than 5.5 is required, or some equivalentmeasure <strong>of</strong> English language pr<strong>of</strong>iciency.For more details contact the International Office:Phone: +64 9 373 7513Email: int-questions@auckland.ac.nzwww.auckland.ac.nz/internationalTransferring studentsIf you are applying to transfer from another New Zealand law schoolyou should contact the <strong>Faculty</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Student Adviser.Email: h.smeeton@auckland.ac.nz, or phone +64 9 923 8180Transferring applicants and all graduates who have applied onlinefor <strong>Law</strong> at <strong>The</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Auckland need to forward a photocopy<strong>of</strong> their academic transcripts to the <strong>Law</strong> Selection Committee bythe end <strong>of</strong> November.Address: <strong>Law</strong> Selection Committee, <strong>Faculty</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, Private Bag 92019,Auckland. If your results are not available by early December, you areasked to forward a photocopy <strong>of</strong> your 2013 results to the <strong>Law</strong> SelectionCommittee as soon as they are available.As part <strong>of</strong> the admission process, all transferring applicants are requiredto send the Admissions Office their <strong>of</strong>ficial academic transcript, acertified copy <strong>of</strong> their birth certificate or passport and a passport-sizedcoloured photograph.
Gian Mario Anselmi Laureato in lettere classiche con unatesi dal titolo “ Il medioevo per Machiavelli. Titolare diletteratura italiana alla facoltà di lettere e filos<strong>of</strong>ia diBologna. Collabora con alcuni dei più prestigiosi editoriitaliani. Dal 1993 è direttore dell’istituto Gramsci.Gennaro Barbuto Insegna storia delle dottrine politicheall’Univ. Federico II di Napoli. Nel 2010 ha tenuto seminarisu Machiavelli, sul rapporto tra Vico e Machiavelli alleUniversità di Città del Messico, Grenoble, Bologna e Milano.Tra le sue pubblicazioni: “Machiavelli ed i totalitarismi”.Corrado Ocone Filos<strong>of</strong>o e saggista. Si occupa soprattuttodi temi concernenti la teoria del liberalismo. Nel 2008 isuoi studi crociani prendono corpo nel volume “ BenedettoCroce - Il liberalismo come concezione della vita ”. Scrivesu varie riviste filos<strong>of</strong>iche e culturali ed è nella redazione diReset, Mondoperaio e Le nuove ragioni del socialismo.l’evento è stato organizzatocon la collaborazione di: