Outline Outline Give legal advice, perform legal work and appear in court as a legal practitioner. An undergraduate degree in law is the first qualification you need to practise as a lawyer in Australia.
Curtin's Bachelor of Laws offers a rich and professionally relevant foundation in legal knowledge. You'll learn core skills essential to effective legal practice and build a strong commercial awareness. From early on in your studies, you'll start to recognise the importance of respecting the rule of law along with the responsibilities and ethics of legal practice.
You'll also have the opportunity to choose from optional units that focus on topics such as forensic advocacy, employment law, family law, human rights law and native title law and policy, and law and technology. The range of optional units enables you to tailor your degree to suit your interests.
Most of your course will be completed at Curtin Law School in the heart of Perth city's legal precinct. You can gain practical experience by undertaking simulated legal proceedings in our high-tech moot court, working on real cases at the John Curtin Law Clinic, and participating in our Legal Internships Program.
Through the Legal Internships Program, you can experience working in a legal environment such as a court, law firm or community legal centre, with an organisation's in-house legal team or with a barrister. These experiences will develop your practical legal skills and help you to identify which area of law you may like to practise. Curtin Law School has developed relationships with a range of organisations to offer legal internship placements to our students.
The first year of this course is delivered in semesters at Curtin Perth, with the second and third years delivered in trimesters at Curtin Law School in Perth city. This accelerated format, which is equivalent to a four-year (full-time) undergraduate degree, means you can graduate after just three years of full-time study.
See the Curtin handbook for more course information.
What jobs can the Law lead to? Careers
- Barrister
- Criminal lawyer
- Employment lawyer
- Family lawyer
- Human rights lawyer
- In-house counsel
- Mining lawyer
- Solicitor
Industries
- Banking and finance
- Courts and tribunals
- Government
- Law
- Private legal practice
- Resources
What you'll learn
- apply knowledge of the Australian legal system, statutory rules and case law principles in both the fundamental areas of legal knowledge and a range of elective fields to the resolution of legal problems
- critically and creatively analyse legal problems to articulate the issues involved and apply legal reasoning to make a considered choice between competing solutions
- identify, access, assess and synthesise relevant information from primary legal sources such as cases and legislation and secondary sources such as journal articles and commentaries (including electronic versions of these sources) and gather relevant oral and documentary evidence
- communicate the outcomes of legal research and analysis effectively, appropriately and persuasively to colleagues, to clients and to other professionals and the broader community
- use appropriate electronic legal databases for research purposes and be able to communicate effectively in electronic forms
- maintain intellectual curiosity as to justice and its practical application in the legal system, be able to identify areas where their legal knowledge and skills require further development, and to critically reflect on their own performance as legal professionals, making use of feedback as appropriate
- articulate the similarities and differences between local and other jurisdictions, including interstate and overseas ones, and be aware of the principles of public and private international law
- articulate distinct concepts of law, justice and human rights, with an awareness of different legal traditions and cultures, particularly indigenous cultures; identify how and where indigenous persons and other identifiable social groups are differentially impacted by the legal system.
- work independently, as well as collaboratively, with a developing sense of the ethical issues that arise in legal practice and how these may be resolved