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31% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
LLB Law with Psychology (with Foundation Year)
About this course
Law with psychology is a combination that connects legal analysis with the scientific study of mind and behaviour, offering a genuinely enriched understanding of how the law operates and whom it affects. Law is concerned with rules, rights, obligations and the processes through which disputes are resolved and behaviour is regulated. Psychology asks how people actually think, decide, remember, conform and deviate from social norms. The two together open up some of the most important and contested areas of legal practice: how reliable is eyewitness testimony, how do juries reach decisions, what psychological effects does imprisonment have, and how should the law treat defendants with mental health conditions? At the University of Bedfordshire, this four-year programme, which includes a foundation year providing supported entry into higher education, has placed highly in National Student Survey rankings for learning opportunities in law, as the university notes. You will study the core legal subjects required for a qualifying law degree alongside psychology modules covering cognitive, social, biological and forensic psychology, developing an understanding of human behaviour that is directly applicable to many legal contexts. The foundation year gives additional time to build the academic skills needed for degree-level study in both disciplines. The combination of legal knowledge and psychological understanding is particularly relevant to careers in criminal justice, legal practice involving vulnerable clients, policy-making on criminal justice and mental health, and research in legal psychology. Graduates who want to qualify as solicitors or barristers will need to complete the relevant professional training after graduating. Other graduates go on to careers in criminal justice, policy, social work, healthcare, research, probation, human resources and many other fields where understanding both legal frameworks and human behaviour is valuable. Further study in law, psychology or forensic psychology is also a common route.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 35 respondents (83% response rate)
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