

BA Social Anthropology and Law
About this course
Social anthropology and law is a pairing that illuminates some of the most important questions about how human societies organise themselves and regulate behaviour. Social anthropology examines how different cultures construct meaning, kinship, power, identity, and social order, drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and comparative analysis to understand the enormous diversity of human social arrangements. Law examines the formal systems of rules, rights, and obligations that states and communities create to govern conduct and resolve disputes. Together, the two disciplines prompt a deeper and more critical understanding of legal systems: what counts as law, who makes it, whose interests it serves, and how it operates differently in different cultural and political contexts. At SOAS, University of London, this combination is taught within an institution that has a distinctive focus on the cultures, histories, and politics of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. That means your anthropology will engage seriously with non-Western societies and your law with a genuinely global range of legal systems and traditions, including customary law, Islamic law, and post-colonial legal frameworks. You will develop skills in ethnographic analysis, legal reasoning, and cross-cultural comparison, and you will learn to approach law as a social and cultural phenomenon as much as a technical system. The programme includes a foundation year for those who need to build academic foundations before the main degree. Graduates from this combination are well placed for careers in international law, human rights, development, refugee and immigration law, policy, and the NGO sector. The anthropological perspective is particularly valued in roles that require working across cultural boundaries or understanding how communities experience and interact with legal systems. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in law, international human rights, anthropology, or development studies.
Syllabus & Modules
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