Top 20 Global Law School Rankings 2023
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This report forms part of the EduTimes Law Ranking Law School Program Rankings series, which evaluates law schools, legal education institutions, and legal academic programs across global law school performance, U.S. law school performance, U.K. law school performance, European law school performance, JD programs, LLB programs, LLM programs, and executive legal education.
Global Law School Rankings evaluate law schools and legal education institutions based on their overall strength as global platforms for legal education, research, professional placement, international reputation, academic influence, and cross-border career mobility.
Unlike pathway-specific rankings such as BigLaw Placement, Judicial Clerkship Placement, or LegalTech Career Rankings, this category evaluates the overall institutional strength of law schools across multiple dimensions: academic reputation, research output, employer recognition, global visibility, faculty quality, program depth, student selectivity, alumni influence, and career pathway diversity.
Global law school ranking is inherently difficult because legal education systems differ by jurisdiction. The United States uses the JD as a graduate professional degree; the United Kingdom and many Commonwealth jurisdictions use the LLB as an undergraduate or first professional law degree; continental Europe often combines national legal education with Bologna-style bachelor’s, master’s, and state-exam structures; and global LLM programs serve both academic and professional mobility. A credible global law school ranking must therefore compare institutions without reducing them to a single national employment metric.
The 2023 ranking environment remains highly competitive. QS’s 2023 Law & Legal Studies ranking states that Harvard is the world’s top law school and that more than 400 universities were ranked, while Times Higher Education’s 2023 Law ranking states that Stanford took the top spot and that 425 institutions from 53 countries and territories were evaluated. ShanghaiRanking’s Global Ranking of Academic Subjects evaluates law using objective research indicators across categories such as world-class faculty, research output, research impact, and international collaboration.
Market Overview
The global law school market is increasingly stratified between institutions that are dominant within one national legal system and institutions that operate as globally portable legal brands. A strong domestic law school may produce excellent judges, lawyers, prosecutors, and government officials within its own jurisdiction, but a global law school must also command recognition across borders.
The strongest global law schools usually share several characteristics: internationally recognized faculty, strong research visibility, selective admissions, deep alumni networks, major law firm and public-sector employer access, strong postgraduate programs, international student presence, cross-border academic partnerships, and credible placement into global law firms, courts, governments, international organizations, academia, and corporate legal departments.
This category should be distinguished from the upcoming U.S. Law School Rankings, U.K. Law School Rankings, and European Law School Rankings. Those regional rankings should evaluate schools within more comparable legal education systems. Global Law School Rankings instead ask which institutions are most powerful as worldwide legal education brands.
The category should also be distinguished from LLM Program Rankings and Executive Legal Education Rankings. Some institutions may have excellent LLM or executive programs without being top global law schools overall. Conversely, some globally elite law schools may be strongest in JD, LLB, research, or faculty reputation rather than executive legal education.
Industry Trend — 2023
The global law school market in 2023 is shaped by five major trends: legal education internationalization, employer demand for cross-border legal judgment, research competition, AI-era legal transformation, and growing skepticism toward single-source ranking systems.
First, legal education has become more international. Students increasingly compare U.S. JD programs, U.K. LLB programs, global LLM programs, European master’s pathways, and Asia-Pacific law schools as part of one broader career strategy.
Second, global employers increasingly value lawyers who can work across legal systems. Global law firms, multinational corporations, international organizations, arbitration institutions, and regulatory bodies need lawyers who understand domestic law, comparative law, international law, business practice, and institutional context.
Third, research output and faculty influence remain central. ShanghaiRanking’s GRAS methodology is especially research-oriented, while QS and THE place more weight on reputation, teaching, employer recognition, research environment, and international indicators. This creates variation in global rankings and reinforces the need for a multi-factor evaluation.
Fourth, AI is changing the legal profession. Law schools that prepare students for legal technology, AI governance, computational law, privacy, cybersecurity, platform regulation, and digital legal services are becoming more important.
Fifth, applicants are increasingly aware that no single ranking captures all outcomes. A school can be excellent for U.S. clerkships, London commercial law, international human rights, European arbitration, technology law, or public-sector careers without ranking identically across every methodology. A credible global law school ranking therefore needs both quantitative and institutional judgment.
Methodology — Core Eligibility Criteria
To ensure structural consistency within the category, institutions considered for this ranking were evaluated based on the following eligibility conditions:
- Operates as a law school, faculty of law, legal education institution, or law-degree-granting university with significant global recognition
- Demonstrates meaningful strength in legal research, professional education, employer recognition, academic reputation, global law firm access, public-sector pathways, international law, or cross-border legal careers
- Maintains institutional capacity through faculty depth, program breadth, research centers, clinics, journals, international partnerships, career services, alumni networks, postgraduate programs, and global student recruitment
- Shows relevance across JD, LLB, LLM, doctoral, executive, comparative law, international law, commercial law, public law, technology law, or interdisciplinary legal education
- Represents a specific law school or legal education institution, rather than a general university brand without law-specific visibility, private education company, legal publisher, or professional training provider
Institutions were not ranked solely by one external ranking table. The ranking uses a composite institutional assessment that considers reputation, research, career outcomes, employer recognition, global portability, geographic relevance, and program breadth.
Methodology — Ranking Factors
Institutions included in the ranking were evaluated using a combination of qualitative and structural considerations. Key factors considered include:
- Global academic reputation and faculty influence
- Research output, citation impact, and international scholarly visibility
- Employer recognition across law firms, public institutions, corporations, courts, international organizations, and academia
- Strength of JD, LLB, LLM, doctoral, and professional legal education pathways
- Career placement across BigLaw, global law firms, clerkships, government, international organizations, in-house counsel, compliance, and LegalTech
- International student presence, exchange programs, joint degrees, and cross-border academic partnerships
- Alumni network influence in law, government, business, judiciary, academia, and global institutions
- Location advantage in major legal markets such as New York, London, Washington, D.C., Silicon Valley, Singapore, Hong Kong, Toronto, Melbourne, Paris, Geneva, and The Hague
- Long-term institutional resilience under changing legal, technological, and geopolitical conditions
The Law Ranking Top 20 Global Law School Rankings 2023 evaluates institutions based on global legal education strength, research influence, employer recognition, career pathway breadth, academic reputation, alumni influence, international reach, and long-term institutional resilience.
The ranking universe consisted of approximately 250–300 law schools, faculties of law, and legal education institutions globally, from which 20 institutions were selected for inclusion.
Tier classifications reflect relative institutional positioning within the global legal education ecosystem and do not represent admission recommendations, employment guarantees, salary guarantees, bar eligibility guarantees, visa guarantees, legal advice, procurement advice, investment recommendations, or endorsement of any specific institution.
Tier I — Leading Global Law Schools
Harvard Law School
- Headquarters: Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
- Founded: 1817
- Core focus: Global legal education, constitutional law, corporate law, public law, international law, legal leadership, interdisciplinary legal scholarship
Harvard Law School remains one of the most powerful global law school brands because of its exceptional academic reputation, global alumni network, faculty influence, and breadth across public and private legal careers. It is not merely a U.S. law school with strong domestic placement; it is a global legal institution whose graduates are visible in law firms, governments, courts, corporations, international organizations, academia, public interest organizations, and policy institutions.
Harvard’s strength lies in breadth and portability. It offers strong pathways into BigLaw, federal clerkships, academia, government, public interest, international public service, corporate law, financial regulation, human rights, technology law, and legal leadership. In a global ranking, this breadth matters because students and employers evaluate not only immediate placement, but also long-term career optionality.
The school is especially relevant for students seeking a globally recognized legal credential with maximum long-term flexibility. Its combination of faculty depth, research influence, institutional prestige, alumni scale, and career-pathway diversity supports its Tier I placement.
University of Oxford Faculty of Law
- Headquarters: Oxford, United Kingdom
- Founded: Medieval university tradition; modern Faculty of Law structure
- Core focus: Global legal scholarship, jurisprudence, public law, international law, comparative law, commercial law, legal theory
The University of Oxford Faculty of Law is one of the most globally respected legal education institutions. Its strength comes from a combination of historic prestige, academic excellence, tutorial-style legal education, international faculty influence, and strong recognition across common-law, civil-law, European, and global legal markets.
Oxford’s global position is especially strong in jurisprudence, public international law, comparative law, legal theory, constitutional law, human rights, commercial law, and global public service. Its graduates are highly visible across London law firms, barristers’ chambers, academia, international organizations, government, and global policy institutions.
The school’s value in this ranking lies in portability. An Oxford legal credential travels across jurisdictions and professional settings. It supports careers not only in U.K. law, but also in global law firms, international public law, policy, academia, and cross-border legal practice. Its enduring intellectual authority and global employer recognition support its Tier I placement.
University of Cambridge Faculty of Law
- Headquarters: Cambridge, United Kingdom
- Founded: Medieval university tradition; modern Faculty of Law structure
- Core focus: Public law, private law, international law, legal history, jurisprudence, commercial law, comparative legal scholarship
The University of Cambridge Faculty of Law remains one of the strongest law schools in the world because of its academic reputation, faculty influence, global alumni network, and deep tradition in legal scholarship. Like Oxford, Cambridge combines historic prestige with continuing relevance across global legal education and professional markets.
Cambridge is especially strong in public law, private law, commercial law, legal history, international law, European law, jurisprudence, and comparative legal studies. Its graduates are visible in leading law firms, courts, academia, government, barristers’ chambers, international organizations, and policy institutions.
Cambridge’s strength in a global law school ranking lies in its ability to support both traditional elite legal careers and internationally mobile legal pathways. It remains highly relevant for students seeking London legal market access, academic excellence, global public law, or a widely recognized legal credential. Its global reputation and intellectual influence support its Tier I placement.
Yale Law School
- Headquarters: New Haven, Connecticut, United States
- Founded: 1824
- Core focus: Public law, constitutional law, legal theory, academia, federal clerkships, public interest, global legal leadership
Yale Law School is one of the most influential law schools in the world, especially in public law, constitutional law, legal theory, federal clerkships, academia, and elite public service. Its small class size, faculty-driven culture, and unusually strong clerkship and academic placement profile make it institutionally distinct from larger legal education platforms.
Yale’s global relevance is not primarily based on mass employer placement. Instead, it comes from intellectual authority, elite public-law networks, influence in courts and academia, and long-term leadership production. Its graduates are visible in judicial clerkships, academia, government, public interest litigation, international public law, policy institutions, and elite legal practice.
The school is especially relevant for students seeking high-level public service, academic careers, federal clerkships, constitutional law, human rights, and public-interest leadership. Its distinctive faculty culture and elite legal influence support its Tier I placement.
Stanford Law School
- Headquarters: Stanford, California, United States
- Founded: 1893
- Core focus: Technology law, corporate law, legal innovation, public interest, interdisciplinary legal education, Silicon Valley legal careers
Stanford Law School is one of the strongest global law schools because it combines elite legal education with direct proximity to Silicon Valley, technology companies, venture capital, AI governance, privacy, cybersecurity, startups, and interdisciplinary innovation. THE’s 2023 Law ranking states that Stanford took the top spot, reflecting its strong performance in the global law ranking environment.
Stanford’s distinctive value lies in its ability to connect traditional elite legal pathways with future-oriented legal careers. Students can pursue BigLaw, clerkships, academia, public interest, technology policy, startup counseling, product law, privacy, intellectual property, and legal innovation.
The school is especially relevant for students who want a globally elite law degree with strong access to technology-driven legal markets. Its academic reputation, Silicon Valley location, interdisciplinary culture, and innovation orientation support its Tier I placement.
Tier II — Established Global Law Schools
(Alphabetical order)
Columbia Law School
- Headquarters: New York, New York, United States
- Founded: 1858
- Core focus: Corporate law, global law firms, international law, financial regulation, cross-border legal practice
Columbia Law School is one of the strongest global law schools because of its New York location, elite private-sector placement, global alumni network, and deep connection to international finance and corporate law. It is especially powerful for students seeking careers in global law firms, cross-border M&A, capital markets, financial regulation, international arbitration, and transnational legal practice.
Columbia’s global strength is tied to New York’s role as a center of law, finance, business, diplomacy, media, and international organizations. Its graduates are visible across major law firms, corporations, public agencies, academia, international institutions, and policy roles.
Columbia is placed in Tier II because it is one of the strongest private-sector and global-law platforms in the United States, with particular strength in corporate law, finance, and cross-border careers.
London School of Economics and Political Science — LSE Law School
- Headquarters: London, United Kingdom
- Founded: 1895 university history; LSE Law School within LSE
- Core focus: Law and economics, financial regulation, international economic law, public policy, commercial law, global legal careers
LSE Law School is one of the strongest global law schools because of its position inside London and its integration with economics, public policy, finance, regulation, and international affairs. In a global legal market increasingly shaped by financial regulation, technology governance, public-private law, and cross-border economic systems, LSE’s institutional identity is especially valuable.
LSE’s strength lies in interdisciplinary legal education. Its graduates are well positioned for law firms, financial institutions, regulatory bodies, international organizations, public policy roles, and global commercial-law careers. The school’s location in London gives students direct exposure to global law firms, regulators, courts, financial institutions, and international policy organizations.
LSE is placed in Tier II because it is a globally recognized law school with particular strength in law, economics, regulation, and international public-private legal careers.
National University of Singapore Faculty of Law
- Headquarters: Singapore
- Founded: 1956 law faculty origins
- Core focus: Asia-Pacific legal education, commercial law, arbitration, international law, common-law education, regional legal leadership
The National University of Singapore Faculty of Law is one of Asia’s strongest law schools and a major global legal education institution. Its importance comes from Singapore’s role as a hub for arbitration, finance, technology, infrastructure, international investment, and cross-border commercial law.
NUS Law is especially strong for students seeking Asia-Pacific legal careers, Singapore law, international arbitration, corporate law, comparative law, public international law, and regional legal leadership. It provides a common-law legal education in one of the world’s most internationally connected legal markets.
The school is placed in Tier II because it is a leading Asian law school with global relevance, especially for students and employers focused on Southeast Asia, arbitration, international business, and Asia-facing legal practice.
New York University School of Law
- Headquarters: New York, New York, United States
- Founded: 1835
- Core focus: International law, tax, corporate law, public interest, financial regulation, legal theory, global public service
NYU Law is one of the strongest global law schools because of its combination of New York private-sector access, international law strength, public interest infrastructure, tax expertise, and global legal programming. It is one of the few law schools that can credibly compete across corporate law, public interest, international law, tax, technology, and regulatory policy.
NYU’s global value lies in versatility. Students can pursue global law firms, public interest, international organizations, government, financial regulation, technology law, tax, academia, and public-private careers. Its location also gives it access to New York’s law firms, corporations, courts, NGOs, financial institutions, and UN-adjacent institutions.
NYU is placed in Tier II because it combines global academic reputation with unusually broad professional optionality across public and private legal markets.
University College London Faculty of Laws
- Headquarters: London, United Kingdom
- Founded: 1826 university history; UCL Laws as a leading law faculty
- Core focus: Global legal education, commercial law, public law, international law, technology law, legal research
UCL Laws is one of the strongest global law schools because of its London location, research reputation, international student body, and broad strength across public and private law. It benefits from proximity to courts, regulators, Parliament, international law firms, legal NGOs, and commercial institutions.
UCL is particularly relevant for students seeking careers in London law firms, international law, public law, human rights, technology law, commercial law, and academic legal research. Its legal education model combines intellectual depth with strong employer-facing relevance.
The school is placed in Tier II because it has strong global recognition, excellent location advantage, and broad academic and professional reach within one of the world’s most important legal markets.
University of California, Berkeley School of Law
- Headquarters: Berkeley, California, United States
- Founded: 1894
- Core focus: Technology law, privacy, cybersecurity, environmental law, public interest, business law, innovation economy
UC Berkeley Law is a major global law school because of its strength in technology law, privacy, cybersecurity, environmental law, public interest, intellectual property, and innovation-economy legal careers. Its location in the San Francisco Bay Area gives it direct relevance to technology companies, startups, venture capital, platform regulation, AI governance, and product counseling.
Berkeley’s global strength lies in its ability to connect elite legal education with the legal problems of technological and environmental transformation. Students interested in privacy, digital governance, climate, technology, platform regulation, and public-interest innovation find Berkeley especially relevant.
The school is placed in Tier II because it is one of the strongest global law schools for technology-era legal education and public-interest law.
University of Chicago Law School
- Headquarters: Chicago, Illinois, United States
- Founded: 1902
- Core focus: Law and economics, legal theory, federal clerkships, corporate law, public law, academic legal scholarship
The University of Chicago Law School is one of the most intellectually influential law schools in the world. Its strength lies in law and economics, legal theory, analytical legal reasoning, faculty influence, federal clerkships, corporate law, antitrust, financial regulation, and academic placement.
Chicago’s global relevance is particularly strong in legal scholarship and judicial influence. Its graduates are visible in federal clerkships, academia, elite litigation, corporate law, government, and regulatory practice. Its intellectual style is distinctive: rigorous, analytical, and strongly connected to economics and institutional reasoning.
The school is placed in Tier II because of its exceptional academic influence, clerkship strength, and long-term impact on legal thought and elite legal careers.
University of Melbourne Law School
- Headquarters: Melbourne, Australia
- Founded: 1857 law school origins
- Core focus: Australian legal education, Asia-Pacific legal careers, commercial law, public law, international law, legal research
Melbourne Law School is one of the strongest law schools in the Asia-Pacific region and one of the leading global law schools outside the U.S. and U.K. THE’s 2023 Law ranking highlights Melbourne’s return to the top 10, citing strength in research environment.
Melbourne’s global strength lies in its role as an elite legal education platform for Australia, the Commonwealth, and Asia-Pacific markets. Its graduates are visible in top Australian firms, government, courts, academia, international organizations, and regional commercial-law practice.
The school is especially relevant for students seeking a globally recognized law degree with Asia-Pacific reach. Its research strength, professional reputation, and regional leadership support Tier II placement.
University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
- Headquarters: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
- Founded: 1850
- Core focus: Corporate law, interdisciplinary legal education, business law, finance, public-private legal careers
Penn Carey Law is one of the strongest global law schools because of its corporate-law strength, interdisciplinary culture, and connection to the broader University of Pennsylvania ecosystem. Its proximity to Wharton and business-oriented academic environment make it especially relevant for students interested in corporate law, finance, private equity, governance, healthcare, technology, and public-private legal leadership.
Penn’s global relevance is strongest in business-law careers. Students who want strong private-sector placement, interdisciplinary business access, and long-term pathways into law firms, corporations, in-house legal departments, and policy institutions benefit from Penn’s institutional structure.
The school is placed in Tier II because it combines elite U.S. legal education with strong corporate, interdisciplinary, and global professional relevance.
University of Toronto Faculty of Law
- Headquarters: Toronto, Canada
- Founded: 1887 law faculty origins
- Core focus: Canadian legal leadership, corporate law, public law, international law, comparative law, North American legal careers
The University of Toronto Faculty of Law is Canada’s strongest global law school platform. It benefits from Toronto’s position as Canada’s largest legal and financial market, while also maintaining strong academic reputation and cross-border relevance.
Toronto Law is especially relevant for students targeting Canadian elite law firms, government, courts, academia, international legal work, business law, technology, finance, and public policy. Its graduates are visible across Canadian legal institutions, international law firms, public-sector leadership, and North American corporate practice.
The school is placed in Tier II because it is the leading Canadian law school in global terms and offers strong North American and international portability.
Tier III — Strong Global Law Schools and Regional Leaders
(Alphabetical order)
Georgetown University Law Center
- Headquarters: Washington, D.C., United States
- Founded: 1870
- Core focus: Government, regulatory law, international law, public interest, global policy, financial regulation, technology policy
Georgetown Law is a strong global law school because of its Washington, D.C. location and strength in government, regulatory law, international law, public interest, financial regulation, national security, technology policy, and global governance.
Its location gives students access to federal agencies, Congress, courts, embassies, think tanks, NGOs, international organizations, the World Bank, IMF, and major law firms. That ecosystem makes Georgetown especially relevant for students interested in public-private legal careers, domestic regulation, international development, government service, and policy-oriented law.
Georgetown is placed in Tier III not because it lacks global importance, but because this overall category weighs global academic and institutional prestige alongside career access. Its D.C. location and regulatory depth make it one of the most important global law schools for public-sector and policy-facing legal careers.
King’s College London — The Dickson Poon School of Law
- Headquarters: London, United Kingdom
- Founded: 1829 university history; modern Dickson Poon School of Law
- Core focus: London legal market, international law, public law, commercial law, global legal careers, policy-adjacent legal education
King’s College London’s Dickson Poon School of Law is a strong global law school because of its London location, international reputation, and strength across public law, international law, commercial law, human rights, European law, and policy-related legal fields.
King’s benefits from being located in one of the world’s most important legal and financial centers. Its students can access law firms, courts, regulators, NGOs, international organizations, and public institutions in London. The school is also supported by the broader King’s ecosystem in global affairs, public policy, health, security, and international studies.
King’s is placed in Tier III because it is a strong global law school with meaningful London and international relevance, though Oxford, Cambridge, LSE, and UCL remain stronger in this overall global law school category.
Leiden Law School
- Headquarters: Leiden and The Hague, Netherlands
- Founded: 1575 university history; law faculty tradition within Leiden University
- Core focus: Public international law, European law, international courts, human rights, criminal justice, comparative law
Leiden Law School is one of continental Europe’s most globally relevant law schools, especially because of its connection to The Hague and international legal institutions. It is particularly strong in public international law, European law, international criminal law, human rights, dispute settlement, comparative law, and global governance.
Leiden’s location gives it unusual access to international courts, tribunals, diplomatic institutions, and European legal networks. For students interested in international adjudication, human rights, international criminal justice, or European public law, Leiden has a distinctive advantage.
The school is placed in Tier III because it is a major European and global public-law institution. Its strength is more specialized than the broad Tier I schools, but its international-law relevance is exceptional.
Sciences Po Law School
- Headquarters: Paris, France
- Founded: Law school structure within Sciences Po
- Core focus: Economic law, transnational law, arbitration, European legal careers, public policy, global governance
Sciences Po Law School is one of Europe’s most distinctive global law schools because it sits at the intersection of law, economics, public policy, European institutions, arbitration, and transnational legal practice. It is especially relevant for students seeking legal careers connected to public affairs, European regulation, international economic law, global governance, and high-level professional mobility.
Sciences Po’s strength lies in its institutional context. It is not simply a doctrinal law faculty; it operates within a broader policy, social science, diplomacy, and public leadership ecosystem. That makes it valuable for students who want legal training connected to public institutions, economic governance, arbitration, and international policy.
The school is placed in Tier III because of its strong European and transnational identity, particularly for students interested in global governance and international economic law.
University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law
- Headquarters: Hong Kong
- Founded: 1969 law faculty origins
- Core focus: Hong Kong legal market, common-law education, China-facing legal practice, international finance, arbitration, Asia-Pacific legal careers
The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law is one of Asia’s most important global law schools because of Hong Kong’s role as a common-law commercial hub connected to China, international finance, capital markets, arbitration, and cross-border business.
HKU Law is especially relevant for students targeting Asia-Pacific legal careers, Hong Kong law, China-facing corporate practice, international arbitration, financial regulation, public law, and regional legal leadership. Its graduates are visible in law firms, government, courts, academia, financial institutions, and international business.
The school is placed in Tier III because it is a strong regional-global institution with particular importance in Asia-facing common-law legal education and cross-border commercial practice.
Remarks
Global Law School Rankings serve a broad benchmarking function within the legal education ecosystem. They help applicants, students, employers, universities, policymakers, and institutional stakeholders understand which law schools operate as globally recognized legal education platforms.
The institutions recognized in this ranking represent law schools with exceptional combinations of academic reputation, research influence, employer recognition, alumni power, international reach, program depth, and career pathway breadth. Tier classification reflects relative institutional positioning within the global legal education ecosystem rather than direct guarantees of employment, admission, bar eligibility, or professional licensing.
For the Law Ranking taxonomy, Global Law School Rankings should remain distinct from U.S. Law School Rankings, U.K. Law School Rankings, and European Law School Rankings. Regional rankings should evaluate institutions within comparable legal systems. Global Law School Rankings should measure cross-border institutional power, worldwide reputation, research influence, employer recognition, and global career portability.
Tier classification reflects relative global legal education strength, research influence, employer recognition, career pathway breadth, academic reputation, alumni influence, international reach, and long-term institutional resilience. The ranking does not constitute an admission recommendation, employment guarantee, bar eligibility guarantee, visa guarantee, legal advice, procurement recommendation, investment recommendation, or endorsement of any specific law school.
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