

LLB Law with Psychology
About this course
Law with psychology is an unusual and intellectually rich combination that addresses an important gap in professional legal education. The law operates through people, and the decisions made by judges, juries, witnesses, lawyers, and defendants are all shaped by psychological processes that the law as a formal system often fails to account for. Understanding how memory works, how persuasion operates, how stress affects testimony, and how cognitive biases shape judgement is directly relevant to how lawyers practise and how justice systems function. At the University of Southampton, this three-year full-time degree is one of only a handful of programmes in the UK to combine a qualifying law degree with the study of psychology. You will receive a comprehensive legal education covering the foundation areas of English law required for professional qualification, while simultaneously developing your understanding of psychological theory and research in areas directly relevant to the law, including forensic psychology, the psychology of witnesses and offenders, decision-making, and persuasion. The two disciplines genuinely enrich each other, and the combination develops graduates who understand both the formal rules and the human realities of the legal world. With a typical entry tariff of 152 UCAS points, this is a competitive programme at a strong law school. Graduates from law with psychology programmes are well placed across the full range of legal careers. Solicitor and barrister training are the direct professional routes, and the qualifying law degree provides the necessary academic foundation. Beyond legal practice, the combination opens particular opportunities in forensic psychology services, victim support, criminal justice policy, mediation, and roles that sit at the interface of law, mental health, and the justice system. Postgraduate study in law, forensic psychology, or criminology is a natural continuation.
Syllabus & Modules
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