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BA Law and Psychology (With Foundation Year)
About this course
Law and psychology might seem like distinct pursuits, but they share a great deal of common ground. Law shapes the rules that govern behaviour, resolve disputes, and distribute rights and responsibilities. Psychology seeks to understand the mental processes and behaviours that determine how people actually act, often in ways that legal systems need to take into account. The study of witness memory, criminal decision-making, risk assessment, courtroom behaviour, and the psychological vulnerabilities that the law must accommodate all sit at the intersection of the two. Together they produce graduates who can think rigorously both about what the rules say and about what human beings actually do. At Liverpool Hope University, this four-year, full-time degree includes a foundation year that builds the academic skills and background knowledge you need before progressing to the main programme. It also includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and a work placement, making it one of the most practically enriched law and psychology combinations available. You will study the foundations of English law alongside core psychology content covering developmental, cognitive, social, and clinical areas, as well as more specialist topics at the interface of the two disciplines, including forensic psychology, psychology of crime, and the use of psychological evidence in legal proceedings. The placement and sandwich year allow you to test your learning in professional contexts and to build the kind of practical experience that strengthens graduate applications considerably. As the current course information notes, law affects every part of our lives, setting duties, regulating relationships, and offering mechanisms for resolving disputes. Studying it alongside psychology gives you a richer understanding of why those mechanisms succeed or fail. Graduates pursue careers in law, the criminal justice system, probation, social work, forensic settings, human resources, counselling, research, and public policy. Many go on to the Solicitors Qualifying Examination pathway, postgraduate study in psychology or law, or professional training in clinical or forensic psychology.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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