AGP e-class™ Programs & Cohorts
Canadian common law to advanced cross-border tax laws
One institution. Multiple tracks. The standard stays the same.
Structured legal training designed for analytical clarity, disciplined writing, and exam-level precision. Built for globally trained lawyers and serious law students.
Whether you begin with Canadian law subjects or progress toward advanced cross-border tax and policy frameworks, the standard remains the same.
Meet your instructor
Multi-jurisdictional practice | Western legal training | Standards-driven teaching
Mr Raghav Aggarwal is a multi-jurisdictional lawyer with nearly two decades of cross-border legal practice spanning regulatory, commercial, and taxation matters across India, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada.
Certified by the National Committee on Accreditation (NCA / FLSC), Canada, Mr Aggarwal’s academic training includes Western legal education at Oxford Brookes University, Boston University School of Law, and Osgoode Hall Law School.
His professional work covers international business law, cross-border structuring, taxation, and legal policy analysis. Having navigated licensing processes and legal systems across multiple jurisdictions himself, he understands the precise challenges faced by globally trained lawyers.
Avocat Global Professionals (AGP) e-class™ is built directly from this experience.
The teaching is grounded in structure, clarity, and disciplined legal reasoning. Students are trained to think in frameworks, identify governing principles, and produce controlled, high-scoring legal analysis under exam conditions.

Before you scroll further, ask…
When you approach a question using a framework, it often feels like you know where to begin.
But have you ever stopped to consider: why this issue — in this way — at this stage?
Is it actually arising from the facts, or does it appear that way because the framework expects it?
Is it the right starting point, or just the most obvious one according to the framework?
Most preparation makes things feel structured while you are guided. The difference only shows when you are required to decide independently.
That is where the real gap becomes visible. And once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
