LLM General Programme
Duration and mode of study
One year full-time or two to five years part-time.
Start dates
October each year.
Entry requirements
Candidates should normally have a first- or good second-class honours degree in law or an equivalent degree where law is a substantial element or an equivalent degree in an appropriate discipline. Relevant professional experience post-graduation is given due credit in considering entry requirements.
Fees
2012/2013 - Home/EU: £4,795 International: £12,780
2013/2014 - Home/EU: £5,010 International: £12,820
Course aims
This stream is intended to give the widest possible choice from our range of modules and permit you to make up your own portfolio of topics to suit your own needs or interests. It is possible to combine one or more modules on commercial matters, human rights, European integration, public international law and legal research to meet specialist interests or the needs of niche career plans. This might be of particular help to someone planning a career in non-specialist legal practice or in widely based legal policy oriented organisations whether commercial, NGO or government based.
Course structure
Leicester LLM students are required to complete taught modules totalling 120 credits and a dissertation weighted as 60 credits. As most of the modules on the LLM programme are 15 credits, this normally means studying four modules in both semesters (a small number of modules are 30 credits).
For the Leicester LLM there is a 15 credit compulsory module in semester 1.
LLM Modules
While every effort is made to offer the modules listed below, the availability of a particular module cannot be guaranteed. These can normally be in the stream of your choice, although this is subject to staff capacity, with students studying for the LLM in International Commercial Law having priority over places within their stream. Please see the School's web pages for more details:
Compulsory 15-credit module:
- Academic Writing for Postgraduates in Law
Optional Modules:
- Civil Dispute Resolution Methods
- Commercial Conflict of Laws: Issues of Jurisdiction*
- Commercial Conflict of Laws: Choice of Law Issues*
- Comparative Law
- Consumer Protection in the European Union (DL)
- Contemporary Legal Problems of World Trade
- Contracts for the Carriage of Goods by Sea*
- Critical Perspectives in Law
- Current Issues of Law in International Business*
- Current Trends in International Law
- Diplomatic Law
- Environmental Protection in the European Union (DL)
- European Social Security Law (DL)
- Feminist Perspectives on International Law
- Financial Services Crime*
- Financing International Sales Transactions*
- Freedom of Expression
- General Principles of International Law
- Genocide and the Law
- Global Protection of Human Rights: Implementation Methods
- Global Protection of Human Rights: Core Principles
- Human Rights and Health Care Law
- International Banking Law*
- International Boundary Disputes
- International Commercial Arbitration Moot I & II*
- International Corporate Insolvency*
- International Courts and Tribunals
- International Environmental Law
- International Investment Law*
- International Law and Development
- International Regulation of Companies
- International Sales Transactions*
- Issues and Procedures in European Union Competition Law
- Law and Organisation of the World Trading System
- Legal Argumentation and Method
- Principles of European Union Competition Law
- Regulation of Financial Markets
- Regulation of Intellectual Property Rights in the European Union (DL)*
- Socio-Legal Research
- The European Convention on Human Rights: Convention Rights
- The European Convention on Human Rights: Institutions, Procedures and Fundamental Rights
- The Law of Armed Conflict
- The State, the Law and Religious Freedoms
- Transitional Justice and International Criminal Law
- Theories of Rights
Key
DL = Distance Learning (Leicester LLM students may take a maximum of 60 credits of distance learning modules).
* = module available only to students with a degree in law (or in which law is a substantial element) or an appropriate legal professional qualification.
Teaching and assessment methods
The modules are taught by seminars which are designed to allow students to discuss and debate the subject, with guidance from the tutor. Most modules are assessed by written coursework, although other forms of assessment may be used as well. Students also complete a dissertation over the summer months. This can be normally in the stream of their choice but is subject to the staffing resources being available. Students registered for the LLM in International Commercial Law have priority within that stream.
Interested in these courses? You might also want to consider...
Contact
Course Administrator
School of Law
T: 0116 252 2370
F: 0116 252 5023
pglaw@leicester.ac.uk
www.leicester.ac.uk/law
