<p>Title says it all</p>
<p>Nope .</p>
<p>Think: high GPA regardless of major and high LSAT. Those are the two main keys to admission with LSAT score being more important for most law schools. Having a double, triple, quadruple, a billion majors means essentially nothing. For many having a graduate degree or 2 or more years of working after completing college creates an additional advantage.</p>
<p>No. </p>
<p>Also, the LSAT is ~60% of your application at most top schools (according to statistical research). Your major is of little importance, just make sure to maintain a high GPA.</p>
<p>Having a double major may be a small positive for law schools that emphasize the difficulty of your courses, but it's still better to have a single major if it gets you a higher GPA.</p>
<p>Having a double major is only a LITTLE help if your majors are wildly different. A double major in engineering and comparative literature would get a bit of a bump. A double major in poli sci and history or poli sci and econ, etc. will not help in the least.</p>
<p>^Jonri, can you explain how having two wildly different majors is better than having two similar majors? I'm thinking of doing Econ/Music or Econ/Gov. Provided I get the same GPA, will the Econ/Music help a little more than the Econ/Gov?</p>
<p>To answer your question, the reason a top law school would value two different majors is that it suggests that you have a variety of academic tastes. It is still a small bump, as was said earlier.</p>