

LLB Law with Portuguese
About this course
Law with Portuguese brings together two disciplines that each demand rigour, precision, and an appreciation of how language shapes meaning. Law is the organised framework through which societies manage rights, obligations, and disputes, and studying it at degree level means developing a systematic understanding of legal concepts and rules alongside the analytical and argumentative skills to apply them. Portuguese, one of the world's major languages by number of speakers, opens access to the cultures, literatures, and legal and commercial environments of Portugal, Brazil, and the wider Lusophone world, which spans Africa, Asia, and South America. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time programme is taught within one of Scotland's oldest law schools and combines a full grounding in Scots and English law with sustained study of the Portuguese language and the cultures of the countries where it is spoken. The combination is intellectually coherent as well as practically valuable: legal systems differ significantly across the Lusophone world, and understanding those differences requires precisely the kind of comparative and cultural awareness that this degree develops. You will study the core subjects of law, including contract, property, criminal law, constitutional and administrative law, and private international law, alongside Portuguese at a level that develops genuine fluency over the four years of the programme. The analytical skills developed by legal study, close reading of documents, construction of arguments from authority, identification of relevant precedent, and clear written communication, are complemented by the cultural and linguistic sensitivity that language study cultivates. Together they produce a graduate who can think carefully about how law works in context. Graduates are well positioned for careers in the legal profession, whether in Scotland, England, or internationally, including in jurisdictions where Portuguese is the primary legal language. Commercial law, international arbitration, trade law, and the legal needs of firms operating in Brazil or the Lusophone African economies are all areas where this combination is specifically valuable. Roles in international organisations, government, diplomacy, and business development are also accessible. Further professional training for the Scottish or English and Welsh bar, or postgraduate study in international law or comparative law, are the typical next steps for those entering the legal profession.
Syllabus & Modules
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