building For admission as an attorney, the academic qualification required is an
LLB from a
South African university. (Historically, the B.Proc. degree was also offered.) One then serves "
articles" as a candidate attorney with a practicing attorney for a period specified according to the qualification of the candidate (generally two years if an appropriate legal degree has been obtained); the length of articles may be reduced by attending a practical legal training course or performing
community service. The candidate must also write a "board exam" set by the relevant provincial Law Society. The examination comprises the following: • Paper 1: Practice and procedure (criminal procedure, supreme court procedure, magistrates’ court procedure and motor vehicle accident claims); • Paper 2: Wills and Estates; • Paper 3: Attorneys’ practice, contracts and rules of conduct; • Paper 4: Legal bookkeeping. Although not formally required for practice, specialist training, e.g.
in tax, is usually via specialised
postgraduate diplomas or
LL.M. programmes. Attorneys may additionally qualify as
Notaries and
Conveyancers, via the Conveyancing and Notarial Practice Examinations; those with technical or scientific training may further qualify as
patent attorneys, see
§South Africa there. ==The Legal Practice Council of South Africa==