The Bar Council of India on Thursday informed the Supreme Court that the decision to discontinue the one-year LLM course will come into effect from the academic year 2022-23. Recording the statement to that effect by Bar Council of India (BCI) chairman Manan Kumar Mishra, a bench comprising Chief Justice Sharad A. Bobde, and Justices AS Bopanna and V Ramasubramanian did not pass any interim order. Instead, it sought response from the BCI on a petition by the Consortium of National Law Universities challenging the BCI’s decision to scrap the one-year LL.M programme and derecognize foreign LL.M. The court gave BCI four weeks to respond to the petition. The BCI's decision that the post-graduate course in law (LL.M) has to be of two years spread over four semesters triggered a storm in all the national law universities and other academic institutions, imparting one-year LL.M after the five year BA LL.B. The system of having just one-year LL.M after five year BA LL.B was viewed to be disadvantageous to those who take up the study of law in the three-year course after completing graduation and then have to study for another two years for their master's degree in law. Senior lawyer Abhishek Manu Singhvi, appearing the consortium of NLUs, told the court that the rules under challenge are ex-facie unconstitutional, illegal, ultra vires, arbitrary and premised upon a completely fallacious foundation that BCI is the sole body to regulate the entire spectrum of legal education in the country. These general knowledge questions will help you in competitive exams Tripura Teachers' Eligibility Test 2021 details will be released in Marchv Career Tips: Follow these tricks to get success in life