Course overview
The Law Faculty offers a wide range of subjects and employs a variety of teaching methods. The degree programme provides both a general liberal education and a basis for careers not only in the legal profession but also in fields as diverse as the civil service, local government, the social services, higher education, the armed forces, business, industry, the media, finance and accountancy.
We start the first two weeks of the first academic year with a two-week induction programme: Laws' Connections: Legal Doctrine and Contemporary Challenges. Laws' Connections is designed to be an inspiring introduction to the study of law here at UCL Laws, and to the role of law in addressing social challenges.
You will then study compulsory modules in Public Law, Contract Law, Property I and Criminal Law during Year 1 of the programme. Students on the programme are also required to undertake a European Legal Studies (German) module (taught in German) in both Years 1 and 2 at UCL. In Year 1, the module introduces the German legal system/methodology, and core concepts of Constitutional Law.
In Year 2 you will take four more compulsory modules: Tort, Property II, European Union Law, and European Legal Studies (German). In Year 2, the European Legal Studies module includes tuition in German Contract law and the Law of Obligations.
The third year of study is spent abroad at a host partner university in Germany. The typical course of study comprises three full-year courses or six one-semester courses in Civil/Private Law, Public Law, and other optional modules in German Law.
In the Final Year you will return to UCL and will choose 120 credits from a list of optional modules. One of them could be a research essay on a legal subject of your choice, subject to approval by the department. Subject to availability and approval, it may also be possible to take up to 30 credits from modules outside of Laws in place of a Laws module.
The department does not offer language tuition. Throughout the programme, you will be responsible for maintaining (or if necessary, improving) your German language skills in order to meet the academic demands of the degree.
Students enrolled on this programme will only be permitted to transfer to the three-year LLB degree in exceptional circumstances.
What this course will give you
You will spend your third year abroad studying German law at one of UCL's partner universities in Germany the Universität zu Köln or Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.
The year spent abroad studying German Law will enhance your critical analysis skills and equip you for the fourth and final year at UCL.
In your final year at UCL, you will be offered a wide range of modules which will give you the opportunity to explore certain fields more in depth and build an expertise.
The international scope of our degrees is reflected in the content of different topics, itself reflecting the expertise of our staff in international and comparative law.
