LLB Law with Criminology
Reading, United Kingdom
DURATION
3 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline
EARLIEST START DATE
Jan 2025
TUITION FEES
GBP 25,250 / per year *
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* new international students: £25,250 | new UK/Republic of Ireland students: £9,535 per year for 2025/26
Introduction
Gain the knowledge and skills to pursue a career in law, while exploring concepts of crime and justice, with our LLB Law with Criminology degree.
Choose LLB Law with Criminology at the University of Reading
- Our LLB courses are accredited by the Solicitors Regulation Authority and the Bar Standards Board, providing you with the first qualification for entry into the legal profession.
- 99% of our research is of international standing (Research Excellence Framework 2021, combining 4*, 3* and 2* submissions – Law).
- 90% of our students said that teaching staff were good or very good at explaining things (National Student Survey 2023, 90% of respondents studying in the School of Law).
What you'll study
Taught by experts in the School of Law, our LLB Law with Criminology degree enables you to understand the law in the context of criminal justice and criminological practice.
You'll engage with contemporary issues such as social injustice, while developing a critical understanding of the English legal system.
You will gain the legal expertise to practice in areas such as criminal law, public law, and equity and trusts. By combining law and criminology, you'll also explore wider national and global questions such as:
- what is crime?
- what is justice?
- is rule-breaking governed by human nature or influenced by the wider social context?
In your first year, you’ll focus on four key areas of English law – contract, tort, criminal and public law – and practise applying the law to hypothetical scenarios. You’ll also explore the core concepts of criminal justice.
In your second year of study, you will expand your knowledge of law and explore the central theories of criminology. Your modules will cover topics such as:
- EU law
- equity and trusts
- land law
- women, crime and justice
- criminological research methods.
Your final year will feature a law dissertation, along with the opportunity to study law and criminology in greater depth. We offer a range of optional modules, including:
- Gender and Law
- Contemporary Issues in Punishment
- Race, Ethnicity and Justice
- Prisons in Crisis.
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
You may be eligible for a scholarship or bursary to help pay for your study. Students from the UK may also be eligible for a student loan to help cover these costs.
We have several scholarships available to undergraduate students.
Curriculum
Compulsory modules
Year 1
- English Legal Systems and Skills: Gain the relevant understanding and skills required to study law as you examine the interrelationship between law and other social and cultural elements. Additionally, you’ll develop employability skills and learn how to carry out legal research, analysis, writing, and oral presentation.
- Contract: Develop a critical understanding of the key principles of contract law. You’ll learn to identify the basic structure of the common law contract as well as how to recognise and respond to a series of legal issues commonly associated with contract law. As you study, you’ll analyse reported cases and develop articulate arguments for and against particular conclusions.
- Criminal Law: Explore the application of a range of criminal offences and defences as you learn the fundamental principles of criminal law in the English Legal System. You’ll gain an appreciation of the development of the criminal law by precedent and statutory interpretation, focusing on law in theory and practice and the need for reform.
- Tort: Develop an understanding of tort within common law tradition as you apply relevant case law, judgments, and statutes to critical analysis. You’ll learn to identify the basic structure of tort and its fundamental principles.
- Public Law 1: Study the field of constitutional law, administrative law, and protection of rights. You’ll be introduced to the essential features of the British constitution, including its legal and political institutions, and how it relates to the enactment, enforcement, and amendment of laws.
- Introduction to Criminal Justice: Study the process for preventing and managing crime. You’ll be introduced to main criminological traditions and perspectives relevant to studying criminal justice, focusing on the development, role, organisation, and governance of the main institutions and agencies involved in crime control and punishment.
Year 2
- Equity and Trusts: Discover the fundamental concepts of equity and examine the main principles of express, resulting and constructive trusts, and purpose trusts. You’ll learn to apply the principles to fact situations, defending your arguments with critical analysis and relevant materials.
- EU Law: Develop a thorough understanding of the main institutional and constitutional features of the legal system of the EU. You’ll gain knowledge of core principles of the internal market and citizenship in the EU legal order and develop a deep understanding of contemporary challenges and successes of the EU.
- Land Law: Discover how rights in and over property are created, transferred, and disposed of within the frame of the law in England and Wales. You’ll consider land registration, co-ownership, leases, mortgages, and how courts enforce legal and equitable obligations in relation to land.
- Public Law 2: Further develop your understanding of constitutional law, administrative law and the protection of rights. You’ll rely on your existing knowledge of legal and political institutions and constitutional principles as you study judicial review of administrative action in the UK and study specific instances where human rights have been threatened.
- Introduction to Criminology: Explore crime, justice, punishment and social harm as you explore the discipline of criminology. You’ll consider main theoretical perspectives as you learn about criminology’s main concepts, the nature of crimes, and the correlation of social inequalities such as class, age, sex, gender, race, ethnicity, and disability with victims.
Year 3
- Dissertation: Embark on a research journey that allows you to implement all you‘ve learned about law and legal theory. You’ll identify your own research question, conduct research, and analyse relevant law and literature to organise and articulate an extended written project.
These are the modules that we currently offer for 2024/2025 entry. They may be subject to change as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Please note that the University cannot guarantee that all optional modules will be available to all students who may wish to take them.
You can also register your details with us to receive information about your course of interest and study and life at the University of Reading.
Career Opportunities
Careers guidance and work experience
Our dedicated work experience programme provides you with opportunities to explore potential career paths, gain valuable practical insight, and strengthen your future job applications.
A work experience bursary is available to ensure placements are accessible to everyone.
Past Reading students have completed work experience with Thames Valley and City law firms (London), barristers, government agencies, not-for-profit organisations, and in-house legal counsel.
Alongside our dedicated careers advisor, we provide help with CV writing, placement applications and interview techniques. We also host regular commercial awareness workshops and other career-orientated events, including employer visits, alumni conversations, and career talks, which feature practitioners from a range of fields discussing their work.
Graduate opportunities
Your degree will equip you with a range of transferable skills and knowledge needed to succeed in any career of your choice. You can choose to take professional exams after graduation, and work as a solicitor or barrister.
Outside law, our graduates are successful in accountancy firms, local government, finance, marketing, and in a wide variety of other fields.
Past graduates have worked with global corporations, national and European businesses, as barristers in chambers, and for the Crown Prosecution Service.