

LLB Law and Sociology
About this course
Law and sociology make a natural pairing because they examine society from complementary directions. Law analyses the formal rules and institutions through which order is maintained and disputes are resolved, while sociology investigates the underlying social structures, inequalities, and cultural forces that shape behaviour and experience. Studied together, they raise fundamental questions about justice, power, and the relationship between rules and the social conditions from which they emerge and which they reinforce. The University of Edinburgh offers this four-year full-time degree, which includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at an international partner institution. Edinburgh's law programme is rooted in Scots law, a distinct legal system with its own principles and history that differs in important ways from English law, while drawing on civil law traditions shared with continental Europe. This gives your legal education a particularly comparative dimension that the year abroad can reinforce. The sociology component gives you a strong grounding in social theory, research methods, and the empirical study of inequality, crime, gender, class, race, and organisations. You will develop the ability to think critically about social arrangements, to interrogate evidence carefully, and to connect legal and social analysis in ways that illuminate both. Graduates from law and sociology programmes go on to a wide range of careers. Law qualifications open routes to the legal professions in Scotland and across the UK, while the sociological dimension is valued in policy, social research, the voluntary sector, criminal justice, public administration, and journalism. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in law, criminology, social policy, or research, and the analytical skills the combination develops support strong careers wherever the ability to reason clearly about social institutions is needed.
Syllabus & Modules
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