Accessibility links
Not signed up?
Accessibility links
Not signed up?
| Subject: |
|
|---|---|
| Institution: |
|
MA
University of Bristol - Department of Philosophy
Programme overview This programme is designed for students wishing to explore the connections between the two subjects, and is weighted towards philosophy. Students combine their philosophical studies with an academic legal component from the LLM.
MSc
University of Bristol - School of Law
This programme develops your knowledge and understanding of interdisciplinary approaches to the study of law and legal phenomena. It provides a sound research training for students wishing to proceed to a PhD or a career in socio-legal research through the study of different research methodologies across the social sciences and law.
PhD / MPhil
University of Bristol - School of Law
The PhD and MPhil are substantially different from other types of postgraduate work. It is the responsibility of each student to devise an independent research project to be undertaken under the supervision of a member of staff.
LLM
University of Bristol - School of Law
This programme offers a range of units which give you the opportunity to study the internal workings of the Union and the ever-increasing penetration of Community law into the national legal orders of the Member States. Programme Structure Part One You may study four units from the following, or three units from the following with a further unit chosen from any of the other LLM programmes, or two units from the following and two from the LLM in International Law. * Competition Law of the EU * Constitutional and Substantive Law of the EU * Democracy and Legitimacy in the EU * Environmental Law * European Contract Law * EU International Relations Law * EU Trade Law * Human Rights Law * International and European Immigration and Refugee Law * International Commercial Litigation Assessment is by examination in the summer term.
LLM
University of Bristol - School of Law
This programme offers a range of units suitable both for those with some previous knowledge of human rights law and for those seeking an introduction to specific human rights law issues. The units are in the traditional fields of human rights law (eg International Law and Human Rights; Human Rights Law) but they also cover more specialist areas (Individual Employment Rights, International Law of Labour and Welfare Rights, International and European Law on Refugees and Asylum; International Criminal Law; Privacy Law: Theory and Practice).
LLM
University of Bristol - School of Law
This programme offers a range of units for those wishing to specialise in employment and company law matters. It provides an opportunity to study comprehensively both employment and company law aspects of modern business.
LLM
University of Bristol - School of Law
This programme offers a range of units for those wishing to examine these issues from a broad perspective, both economic and socio-political. The units cover the international legal framework, trade, employment and human rights, from both a practical and a theoretical perspective.
LLM
University of Bristol - Faculty of Social Sciences and Law
This programme offers a range of units, suitable both for those with some previous knowledge and for those seeking an introduction to specific international law issues. The units are mainly in the field of Public International Law, although Private International Law issues can be explored through International Contracts or many of the other Commercial Law units.
LLM
University of Bristol - Faculty of Social Sciences and Law
The Maritime Law programme offers a range of units for those wishing to specialise in shipping and related matters. It provides an opportunity to study comprehensively both the private and public law aspects of international maritime law, in particular in a commercial and international trade law setting.
LLM
University of Bristol - Faculty of Social Sciences and Law
The Public Law programme offers a range of units which explore issues in public policy and the law. The focus is on the relationship between the pressures that operate within particular areas of public policy, and the role of law both in setting the framework for decision-making and as a tool for achieving policy goals.
This website is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with CSS enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets if you are able to do so.