

LLB Law
About this course
Law is the discipline that governs how societies organise themselves, resolve disputes, protect rights, and hold power to account. Understanding legal rules and the reasoning behind them is not only essential for those who wish to practise as lawyers: it is increasingly valuable for anyone who works in public life, business, policy, or the voluntary sector. At the University of Bedfordshire, the LLB Law is a three-year full-time programme that develops the legal knowledge, analytical thinking, and professional skills needed for a range of careers in and around the law. The degree covers the foundational areas of English law that any qualifying LLB programme must address: contract law, tort, criminal law, constitutional and administrative law, and the law of equity and trusts. Beyond these core areas, you will engage with the skills of legal method and research that allow you to work with statutes, case law, and legal argument effectively. The University of Bedfordshire's programme has been recognised in national student surveys for the quality of its learning opportunities, including the development of knowledge and skills for the future, which reflects an approach to legal education that engages with the practical and professional dimensions of legal work alongside the academic content. You will develop the ability to construct clear and well-reasoned legal arguments, to research unfamiliar areas of law independently, and to communicate complex legal analysis in writing and orally. Graduates of the LLB have a range of career options. The most direct path is to the legal profession, through the Solicitors Qualifying Examination or the Bar Training Course, with careers as solicitors, barristers, or legal executives in private practice or in-house legal roles. Other career paths include compliance and regulatory roles, the civil service, legal journalism, advice work, and management and business roles where legal literacy is an advantage. Some graduates go on to postgraduate legal study or to conversion routes into related professions. The analytical and written communication skills that law develops are broadly transferable and consistently valued by employers across many sectors.
Syllabus & Modules
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