Law is one of the most respected professions in the world, and studying an undergraduate or postgraduate degree at a UK law school will put you on the right path towards a successful career.
Law at the University of Cambridge is intended to give a thorough grounding in the principles of law viewed from an academic rather than a vocational perspective.
At Cambridge, all first-degree courses, in whatever subject, lead to the degree of Bachelor of Arts (BA) with Honours. An undergraduate must pass a Part I and a Part II ‘Tripos’ examinations to qualify for this degree.
The Faculty of Law in the University of Oxford is one of the largest in the UK and is a federation of thirty law schools in the colleges of the University.
Oxford admit and support and teach and examine a diverse and outstanding body of students from all over the world and the student-to-faculty ratio is approximately 7:1.
In 2017, the School of Law at Queen Mary, University of London was voted 37th best university in the world to study law by Times Higher Education subject ranking 2018.
The School of Law is the best law school in London in the Guardian University Guide 2018 subject league tables and in the National Student Survey (NSS) 2016, the School scored 91 per cent for student satisfaction.
Durham University Law School is in the QS World Rankings top 40 law schools and research was ranked 3rd best in the 2014 Research Excellence Framework.
Durham Law alumni include some of law’s leading figures, such as current members of the UK Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Members of Parliament, in the Government and senior positions in law and other industries.
London School of Economics Law department is one of LSE’s largest and most pre-eminent departments with over 60 academic members of staff. It enjoys a uniquely international academic community with staff and students from all over the world.
In the 2015 QS World University Rankings the LSE was ranked 7th globally, and 1st in London, for the study of Law.