Law with Business (2016 entry)

LLB (Hons), 3 years, UCAS: M1N1
Typical A level offer: AAA-AAB

Book to attend an Open Day.

Subject overview

Why law?

Studying law develops your skills of analysis, argument and persuasion, which equip you for a variety of careers after graduation. You consider how the law regulates the relationship between the individual and the state, and how it responds to dealings between individuals and groups. You engage with the very organisation of society and, through the lens of law, you examine all its constituent elements: commercial, social, political and economic relationships, families and associations, individuals and governments, countries and international organisations.

Why law at Sussex?

  • In the 2014 National Student Survey (NSS), our students rated law at Sussex 6th for satisfaction with teaching and 8th for overall satisfaction among comparable UK institutions.
  • You are taught by research-active faculty and all our courses are qualifying law degrees, providing excellent skills for your future career: 93 per cent of our graduates are in work or further study six months after graduation (Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education Survey 2013/14).
  • We offer excellent extracurricular activities including mooting, client interviewing and negotiating competitions. Our Student Law Society is active in arranging social and educational events and has won student society awards.

Ryan's student perspective

Ryan Dowding

‘I’m passionate about law and there are many opportunities at Sussex to develop that passion into skills that will be invaluable in securing employment and succeeding in the courtroom itself.

‘I took part in (and won) the University’s advocacy competition, after which the tutors ran training courses targeted at improving the candidates’ weaker areas in preparation for Blackstone’s National Criminal Advocacy Competition 2014. This helped me to go on and be voted Best Criminal Advocate at the competition.

‘I’m the Project Manager of the Innocence Project at Sussex, which is part of a national network that looks at cases where people convicted of serious crimes have exhausted all appeal options yet still maintain their innocence. It’s a great opportunity to get hands-on experience with real cases.

‘I’ve also attended an intensive leadership course. Company bosses put on workshops that gave us an insight into increasing confidence and effective leadership techniques. It’s just one of the many ways Sussex prepares its students for success in the future.’ 

Ryan Dowding
LLB in Law

John's faculty perspective

Dr John Child

'Our growing Law Department is a vibrant and exciting place to teach students taking the LLB, Graduate Diploma and LLM courses. I've taught various law modules at a number of other universities and I've also worked at the Law Commission. I bring all of this experience into my teaching at Sussex.'

‘My main research area focuses on criminal law theory and doctrine, examining the substantive rules that make up the criminal law, as well as discussing and questioning their theoretical foundations. It is this critical engagement with the law that I believe is the most important aspect to legal study and scholarship.

‘To the non-lawyer, the law can appear as a dry set of rules to be learned. To the law student and scholar, the law is an imperfect and dynamic framework
to be engaged with, to be questioned, and to be challenged.’ 

Dr John Child
Lecturer in Law,
University of Sussex

Share:

Terms and conditions