Pre-law is not a major program, but rather serves as a way to ensure contact between students and the Pre-law adviser, who can provide information and advice about particular law schools, law school applications, and the LSAT.
To participate in the Pre-law program, you must first declare an academic major. Your individual academic strengths and personal intellectual interests will dictate your choice. Any major program that requires you to think and work independently, and which demands that you research and produce original work of the highest caliber, is one you should pursue.
Admission to most law schools requires a bachelor's degree (or in some cases a minimum of three years of undergraduate study), with a specified minimum grade-point average, and an acceptable score on the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). This test involves general intellectual abilities, skills in organization and expression of ideas, and general knowledge in the fields of the humanities, social sciences, and the STEM fields.
Law school admissions committees are looking for talented, accomplished, and (most importantly) interesting and well-rounded applicants. Whether you major in marine biology or literature, history or mathematics, or any other discipline, as long as you're doing something you love and are doing it exceptionally well, you'll have chosen an appropriate Pre-law major.
Further information may be obtained from Dr. Guillaume Bogiaris, Pre-Law Advisor, Station #22, University of West Alabama, Livingston, AL 35470.