

BA French and Law
About this course
French and law is a combination that brings together linguistic and cultural proficiency in one of Europe's most important languages with a rigorous legal education. At the University of Stirling, this LLB French and Law is a four-year full-time programme that includes a year abroad, giving you extended time in a French-speaking environment that deepens both your language and your understanding of how French legal and civic culture operates. Scotland's legal system has civil law foundations that give Scottish law students a particular advantage in engaging comparatively with the codified legal traditions of France. The French strand develops your language to a high level of proficiency while engaging with the literature, history, and contemporary society of France and the broader Francophone world. The year abroad provides the immersive experience that consolidates linguistic competence and develops the cultural awareness that professional use of French requires. The law strand covers the foundational areas of Scots and English law, alongside international and European dimensions of the legal curriculum that connect directly to French legal practice and the European legal system more broadly. Legal method, contract, tort and delict, criminal law, constitutional and administrative law, and areas of commercial and private international law are all part of the programme. The combination of legal training and French language expertise is particularly powerful in international and European legal contexts, where the ability to work across jurisdictions and in more than one language is a genuine professional advantage. Graduates of French and law programmes are well placed for careers in the legal profession, international business law, European institutions, diplomacy, international arbitration, and policy roles with a European dimension. Firms with significant French or European practices are natural employers, as are in-house legal departments of companies operating across France and the UK. Some graduates go on to the Legal Practice Course or Diploma in Professional Legal Practice to qualify as solicitors, while others pursue postgraduate study in comparative law or international and European law. The combination of legal rigour and French language competence is a distinctive and consistently marketable qualification.
Syllabus & Modules
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