DEAR ASSUMI,
As per me, only US is having the hardest law course to obtain Law Degree.
For ref go throu the following sites.
ABA-approved Law Schools & institutions in the United States.
First, the hard part is just beginning. Law schools, unlike medical schools or some undergraduate institutions, don’t have classes specifically designed to weed out the weaker candidates. The most demanding classes, however, tend to fall in the first year when you take the core curriculum requisites mandated by the ABA. Courses such as Contracts, Torts, Constitutional Law, Criminal Procedure, Property Law, Civil Procedure and Legal Writing lay the necessary groundwork for a career in law and the rest of law school, but they’re also the hardest courses you’ll take. All the concepts of law are spelled out in these classes; everything else flows from this knowledge base. In many ways, these first few courses are the most important courses you’ll take in law school, and will be the ones you reference most as a practicing attorney.
Study Law in the US
The Juris Doctor program typically lasts 3 years for full-time students and 4 years for part-time students. First-year (1L) students usually take courses in legal writing, contracts, torts, criminal law, constitutional law, and other courses. Most students feel that the first-year is the “hardest” and the most intense because of all the core courses, exams, and the Socrates method used in most of their classes where students are cold called by the professor to state a case or respond to a case-based
https://www.macquil.com/articles/studylaw.php