Designed and taught by practising lawyers and academics, Deakin’s accredited Bachelor of Laws integrates sound legal training with real-world experience, developing key skills in problem-solving, analytical thinking and ethical reasoning.
Are you looking for a degree that prepares you for a leading legal or professional career?
Deakin's Bachelor of Laws attracts some of the brightest and best students in Australia and our graduates enjoy high employment rates in dynamic roles across law, business, journalism, public administration, private enterprise and politics.
A distinctive feature of Deakin’s law degree is the focus on experiential learning. The legal profession is highly commercialised and lawyers are increasingly required to provide clients with practical, commercial and governance advice, in addition to legal expertise. As credit towards your degree, you will undertake work-integrated learning placements. You may be placed at law firms, legal aid providers and government offices that deliver the legal skills and experience that employers are looking for in the competitive job market.
Throughout your degree, you’ll develop practical legal skills, including:
negotiation
mediation
preparing for court appearances
legal drafting
statutory interpretation.
You’ll also develop transferable skills that will launch you on a variety of career paths. That could mean entering the business sector in almost any industry or government service in areas such as law reform, politics or public administration.
Law at Deakin offers you the opportunity to jump aboard our international programs and placements and take your study overseas for a few weeks, a trimester, or even a year. Our global study itinerary includes the Chinese Commercial Law Study Tour, the Alternative Dispute Resolution Tour to the United States, the prestigious Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot in Hong Kong and Vienna, and options to study one or more elective units (such as international human rights law) at an overseas institution.
Indicative student workload
A full time law degree has approximately the same workload as a full time job. Full time students should expect to commit around 40 hours per week to their studies, including attendance at class, extensive reading, writing, and critical analysis for completion of all assessments and preparation for exams. Part-time students should expect a pro-rata commitment depending on how many units they undertake.
The minimum expected workload for a Law unit will normally be around 150 hours, which includes attendance at class, reading, completion of any assessment, and preparation for the exam.
Professional recognition
Deakin’s Bachelor of Laws is designed to satisfy the university component of the requirements to become an Australian Lawyer set by the Victorian Legal Admissions Board (VLAB). In addition to completing an approved LLB degree, a person seeking entry is required to work for one year as a legal trainee, or to undertake a practical legal training (PLT) course.
Career opportunities
Obtaining a law degree is your first step to entering the legal profession. Upon completion of your degree and the additional practical legal training, you’ll be qualified to work as a solicitor or barrister in all legal fields, including:
commercial law
criminal law
family law
public international and human rights law
refugee law
personal injury law
In addition, your degree opens numerous other career opportunities. As an alternative to practising as a barrister or solicitor, you may choose to enter:
business as a corporate lawyer, consultant, company administrator or business manager
government as a lawyer or policy adviser with departments or authorities as diverse as the Attorney General's Department, the office of Parliamentary Counsel, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
industrial relations
public administration
education
media
politics
law reform
Participation requirements
Units in this course may have participation requirements that include compulsory placements, work-based training, community-based learning or collaborative research training arrangements.
Mandatory student checks
Units which contain work integrated learning, a community placement or interaction with the community may require a police check, working with children check or other check. These requirements will be detailed in unit guides upon enrolment.
A distinctive feature of the Deakin Law degree is the large number of commercial law elective units offered in the course. You can choose to add a commercial focus to your degree by selecting elective units from the wide range of commercial electives available. However, the School also offers a number of public law electives, drawing upon the significant expertise of staff in the areas of private and public international law, criminal law, constitutional and human rights law, and health law.
Clinical legal education
Legal Internship
In conjunction with Community Legal Centres and other legal organisations, Deakin Law School offers a clinical skills unit. This involves students working in private law firms, companies employing in-house counsels, public legal centres and statutory bodies under the supervision of a legal practitioner. You will assist the practitioner to take instructions and to advise and represent clients. Clinical training of this nature is designed to teach you skills such as interviewing, counselling, negotiation, communication and advocacy. Deakin's Legal Internship enables you to gain an appreciation of certain aspects of legal practice and to extend and deepen your theoretical knowledge and critical thinking skills while working in a legal environment. Quotas apply and enrolment is via application.
Deakin Law School offers five teaching law firms which provide legal placements for students. The clinics operate under the supervision of qualified legal practitioners and offer opportunities for students to build legal skills in the following areas:
Civil and commercial law Criminal law Employment law Venture law Family law
A Deakin Law Clinic can be taken as a Law Elective in year 3 or year 4 of your Law degree.
Study abroad opportunities
Deakin Law School offers a number of study abroad opportunities such as the Chinese Commercial Law study tour. Each year a team of students represents the School in the prestigious Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot in Hong Kong and Vienna.
Course of study
The Deakin Law Program is designed to satisfy the university component of the requirements to become a barrister and solicitor in Victoria set by the Victorian Legal Admissions Board. Study may be undertaken on either a full-time or part-time basis.
Admission to legal practice
At present, to qualify for admission as a barrister and solicitor in Victoria, university graduates are required to complete legal traineeships (previously known as articles of clerkship) for one year or to complete a legal practice course. Institutes that offer Practical Legal Training are:
The College of Law Victoria: Victorian Professional Program
The Leo Cussen Institute [which holds a seven month full-time practical legal training course], plus an alternative on-line course.
Australia National University Practical Legal Training Course offered in Melbourne.
Fees and charges
Fees and charges vary depending on your course, your fee category and the year you started. To find out about the fees and charges that apply to you, visit the Current students fees website.
Course Learning Outcomes
Graduate Learning Outcomes
Course Learning Outcomes
Discipline specific knowledge and capabilities
Demonstrate an understanding of the Australian legal system and the fundamental areas of knowledge required for legal practice as situated within international contexts and the broader contexts within which legal issues arise.
Communication
Communicate legal knowledge effectively to legal and non-legal audiences, both verbally and in writing
Digital literacy
Use a range of digitally-based technologies to locate, evaluate and disseminate information
Critical thinking
Exercise critical thinking, judgment and intellectual independence to evaluate, consolidate and synthesise knowledge relevant to legal doctrine and legal practice.
Problem solving
Apply legal reasoning and critical analysis to generate and articulate accurate and relevant responses to legal issues.
Self-management
Exercise responsibility and accountability for own learning, and possess abilities to reflect on own capabilities, performance and feedback to support personal and professional development.
Teamwork
Collaborate effectively in a team environment demonstrating constructive engagement and contribution to the team and the ability to draw on strengths of others.
Global citizenship
To be aware of and apply legal knowledge in different Reflect on the ethical and professional behaviours and responsibilities of legal professionals and demonstrate an understanding of the impact that different social, ethical, global or environmental perspectives have on exercising legal practice in the community
Course rules
To complete the Bachelor of Laws, students must attain a total of 32 credit points, plus completion of the compulsory 0-credit point unit, MAI010 Academic Integrity. Most units (think of units as 'subjects') are equal to 1 credit point. Most students choose to study 4 units per trimester, and usually undertake 2 trimesters each year.
14 credit points of elective units (no more than 5 elective units at Level 1)
The 14 credit points of elective units must include:-
a minimum of 6 credit points of law electives, including 1 credit point of WIL/practical/ experiential unit from a list.
a minimum of 4 credit points of non-law electives (these may be selected from any undergraduate units offered by the University, subject to eligibility) (i.e. a maximum of ten credit points of Law Electives can be chosen)
Note: It is not compulsory to choose electives from only one list; students may choose electives from across the Commercial Law and Public Law elective list)
^ MLT code denotes the study tour version of the unit
* Previously coded MLL210
# Previously coded MLL417
Note:
Not all units will be offered every year.
The Law School might from time to time develop new units to strengthen these lists, and develop other lists.
Course structure
Commercial Law electives
Note: It is not compulsory to choose electives from only one list; students may choose electives from across the Commercial Law and Public Law elective list)
Course duration - additional information Course duration may be affected by delays in completing course requirements, such as accessing or completing work placements.
Further information
Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.