IJC selects.
This is how you come to our attention.
The International Jurisdictions Council identifies and invites practices for designation — it does not accept open applications. This page exists for practices that wish to be considered in future jurisdictional reviews. It is not an application. It is a formal request for consideration — a signal to IJC that your practice exists, operates in a specific practice or industry domain, and would welcome assessment if and when IJC reviews that jurisdiction.
Submitting this form is not an application for designation. IJC does not accept applications. What you are submitting is a request for consideration — a signal to IJC that your practice exists, operates in a specific jurisdiction and practice or industry domain, and would welcome consideration if and when IJC conducts a review of that jurisdiction-domain combination.
Most submissions do not result in designation. This is not a reflection of practice quality. It reflects the fact that each jurisdiction-domain has exactly one Constituent Designated Law Practice. Where that designation is already held by a practice of appropriate depth and alignment, new submissions are held on record and considered only when the existing designation lapses or is withdrawn.
If you have already received a letter from IJC, you are on the wrong page. Your submission should be made through the designated details form linked in your letter — not here.
Four stages. No promises. Full transparency.
Five fields. That is all.
IJC does not need an essay, a credentials document, or a declaration of intent at this stage. We need to know who you are, where you practice, and in what practice or industry domain. The rest is determined by IJC's own review process — not by what you tell us about yourself here.