

LLB Law and Social Anthropology
About this course
Law and social anthropology is an unusual and intellectually powerful combination, placing the formal rules and institutions of legal systems alongside the ethnographic and comparative study of how human societies actually organise themselves, resolve disputes, and give meaning to social behaviour. Law provides a rigorous framework for understanding rights, obligations, governance, and justice, while social anthropology insists that formal legal systems are never the whole story, that what people actually do, believe, and experience often diverges from what rules prescribe, and that this gap is as important as the rules themselves. The University of Edinburgh's four-year full-time degree in law and social anthropology includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at an international partner institution. Edinburgh's law programme is grounded in Scots law, providing a comparative dimension that is particularly valuable for a degree that asks you to think across legal systems and cultural contexts. The social anthropology component draws on Edinburgh's research strength in comparative ethnography and on a tradition that takes fieldwork, cultural relativism, and careful attention to local knowledge as its starting points. You will develop skills in legal reasoning and case analysis alongside ethnographic method and social theory, learning to move between formal analytical frameworks and the messy realities of social life. Graduates from law and social anthropology programmes go on to work in law, policy, international development, human rights, NGOs, social research, the civil service, and academic careers in both disciplines. The degree provides a qualifying law degree for those pursuing legal practice in Scotland or related jurisdictions, while the anthropological training opens pathways into roles where cultural understanding and research skills are central. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in law, anthropology, or interdisciplinary programmes focused on human rights, development, or governance.
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