

BAcc Accountancy and Business Law
About this course
Accountancy and business law is a combination that directly reflects the working relationship between these two professions in the commercial world. Accountants routinely encounter legal questions in tax planning, corporate restructuring, contract disputes, insolvency and financial regulation, and business lawyers need to understand the financial statements and accounting principles that underlie many of the transactions and disputes they work on. Studying both together gives you a genuinely integrated understanding of how commercial life is organised and regulated at the intersection of finance and law. At the University of Stirling, this four-year full-time programme follows the Scottish honours degree structure and includes a year abroad, giving you an international academic dimension alongside the core accounting and legal content. Stirling's business and law faculties are both well regarded, and the combination reflects the university's strength in professionally oriented education with a Scottish and international perspective. The typical entry tariff is around 200 UCAS tariff points, reflecting the high academic level of this combined programme. You will study financial and management accounting, audit, taxation, corporate finance and business finance alongside company law, contract law, commercial law, the law of obligations and the legal frameworks governing financial services and insolvency. The curriculum is likely to be aligned with the exemption requirements of major professional accounting and legal bodies, positioning graduates well for professional qualification routes after graduation. Graduates of accountancy and business law programmes work in accounting practices in audit, tax and advisory roles, in in-house finance and legal teams within companies, in commercial law firms, in financial services compliance and regulation, and in the civil service. Many pursue training contracts in accountancy with bodies such as ICAS, ACCA or ICAEW, or training contracts in law leading to qualification as a solicitor. The combination's distinctiveness is particularly valued by employers who deal with the intersection of financial and legal complexity, including insolvency practitioners, corporate finance advisers and commercial banks. Postgraduate study in law, taxation, finance or business is a natural further step.
Syllabus & Modules
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