

LLB Law/Gaelic Language
About this course
Law and Gaelic Language is an unusual and intellectually rich combination, joining two fields that each shed light on identity, culture, and the relationship between communities and the institutions that govern them. Law is concerned with the rules and principles by which societies organise themselves, resolve disputes, and protect rights. Gaelic is one of Scotland's oldest living languages, a carrier of literary tradition, cultural memory, and community identity in the Highlands and Islands and beyond. Studying them together at the University of Glasgow opens up distinctive questions about language rights, the legal status of minority languages, and the role of legal systems in either supporting or marginalising linguistic communities. This four-year programme at Glasgow includes a year abroad, which is a significant part of the degree. Depending on your language trajectory, this may involve time in a Gaelic-speaking community context or in an institution where comparative Celtic or European law is taught alongside the language. Throughout the course, you will develop competence in Scots law, covering areas such as contract, property, criminal law, and public law, while simultaneously building your proficiency in Gaelic across reading, writing, and oral communication. You will engage with Gaelic literature, media, and culture as well as the legal frameworks that bear on language policy in Scotland and internationally. Glasgow has particular strengths in both Scots law and Celtic and Gaelic studies, and the combination reflects the university's location in a country where both fields have direct contemporary relevance. Scotland's devolved legal system and ongoing debates about the place of Gaelic in public life give the programme a live, contested quality that purely historical or theoretical study cannot replicate. Graduates of this programme follow diverse paths. Some qualify as solicitors or advocates, with a background in Scots law that distinguishes them from graduates of more conventional law programmes. Others work in cultural organisations, broadcasting, education, and public policy, particularly in roles where knowledge of Gaelic and of the legal frameworks surrounding language policy is an asset. The degree also provides a foundation for postgraduate study in law, Celtic studies, or related disciplines.
Syllabus & Modules
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