Central University of Finance and Economics, North China Electric Power University, China University of Mining and Technology, China Geo University, Northeast Agricultural University, Northeast Forestry University, Northeast Normal University, Wuhan University of Technology, Shihezi University, Xinjiang University, Northwest University, Jiangnan University, Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, South China Normal University, Guangxi University, Yunnan University, Hainan University.
Master of Laws and Master of Laws are both at the same degree level, and their training purposes are also somewhat different:
First, the enrollment conditions are different. Master of Laws requires a bachelor's degree in national education, not limited to undergraduate majors (most of the actual candidates are law undergraduates), and non-equivalent undergraduate degrees are not accepted; Master of Law requires non-law graduates with a bachelor's degree in national education. Since 2009, law graduates have been allowed to apply for a master's degree in law.
Second, the test questions are different. LLM's questions tend to be theoretical and subjective. The Master of Law needs to have strong logical thinking and reasoning ability, so the Master of Law is an undergraduate admission for illegal graduates, and the topic tends to practice.