Notarial law
The Notarial Law specialization, part of the Law, Economics and Management field at Université Paris-Saclay, is aimed at students with a law degree or equivalent, and offers a unique pathway for training future notaries through the university system.
- Develop the ability to work independently and in groups.
- Solve complex civil and fiscal legal problems in traditional notarial fields.
- Prepare, in a clear and pedagogical manner, any legal act involving the intervention of a notary (sales contracts, leases, company statutes, liberalities, etc.).
- Independently analyze, interpret and contextualize legislation and court rulings in traditional notarial fields.
- Identify and resolve difficulties associated with the presence of a foreign element
- Communicate clearly, correctly and with pedagogy, adapting to your interlocutor in French and English.
The Notarial Law specialization is unique within the Graduate School of law and the Université Paris-Saclay's range of courses. It is based on the three generalist years of the law degree, and is positioned alongside other master's programs to prepare students for access to a regulated profession. Although other notarial law programs exist in France, only two of them, including the one at Paris-Saclay, offer an international dimension.
The master's degree in notarial law is designed to train future notaries through the university route. A Master's degree in notarial law entitles students to enrol at the Institut national des formations notariales and to pursue the three training periods (the notary as a public officer; the notary as a legal expert; the notary as an entrepreneur) and two-year internship required for the notary's diploma. However, this training is also likely to be of interest to students intending to enter other professional sectors, such as real estate, banking and asset management. The notarial law specialization is based on gradual specialization over two years in the core areas of notarial activity (matrimonial property law, inheritance law, tax law, sales law, etc.), with deliberately more practice-oriented teaching in the second year of the Master's degree. The specialization also offers students a strong European and international outlook, which is a key feature of the degree (English, comparative law, private international law in the first and second years, internship abroad in the second year, etc.). This high level of European and international specialization is designed to make students in this Master's program the ideal contacts in notarial practices for the ever-increasing number of issues with a foreign element.
This specialization is open to students with a law license or equivalent diploma.
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