u/Emotional_Spot_3545

CS and LAW CONFUSION

So I just finished my 1st year of BBA LLB in a law college. The academics are honestly whatever and the uni itself doesn't have any reputation or merit. Profs are literally in their 20s, just graduated and became a prof kinda thing. I know I'll have to focus on external moots, debates and research paper publications but I'm kinda lost.
I know I don't want to go into civil or criminal and litigation, so I was thinking I'll get into Cyberlaw/IP Law or Corporate. I heard CS is very useful for corporate legal jobs but my profs were talking about how you can only hold one degree at a time (?) so if I become CS then I can't practice law, etc etc and I'm so confused as to how that works? I know this is a dumb question but for the love of god I cannot find any clarifications on how CS and Law works + what even is Corporate. Somebody please help me understand and lmk if doing CS is a good idea.

reddit.com
u/Emotional_Spot_3545 — 3 days ago
▲ 4 r/PESU

So I'm a first year law student and I have a withdrawal in a subject (BECAUSE OF 1 CLASS 😭) and I was told by a higher authority that I will be ineligible for scholarships for the rest of the 4 years even if I have no further withdrawals and get top grades. But I was also told by another higher authority that ineligibility will be only for the semester in which I have a withdrawal (this makes sense but I really can't trust them 😭) Does anybody know for sure what happens in the law dept in such cases?

reddit.com
u/Emotional_Spot_3545 — 15 days ago