• Undergraduate

Law with Foundation Year LLB (Hons)

Overview

Overview

Why study at the University of West London?
  • Ranked 30th university in the UK - The Guardian University Guide 2025
  • Our Law courses are ranked #1 in London for modern universities* - Guardian University Guide 2025
  • Number 1 London university for overall student satisfaction - National Student Survey 2024**
  • Best university for Student Experience and Teaching Quality in the UK - The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024

Our LLB (Hons) Law degree will give you the knowledge, tools and experience that will ready you for a rewarding career as a legal professional. 

Your studies at our London university will focus on the law in action and will be led by our staff practitioners who are experts in law and legal practice.

We understand the importance of not just learning about law but putting your theoretical knowledge into practice. You'll have the chance to undertake work experience placements that will help boost your legal skills and expand your understanding of the issues currently facing the profession. We have close links with the Ealing Law Centre and West London Equality Centre. We offer a number of great opportunities, including providing legal counsel to the community, local and national law advice services and law centres, marshalling with judges and shadowing lawyers.

Our law course ranks first in London compared to other London university law degrees in the National Student Survey (NSS) 2021 for 'teaching on my course', learning opportunities, and assessment and feedback. According to the NSS, it's also the top LLB (Hons) course in the UK for academic support.

Foundation Year 

The foundation year course is designed to equip you with the skills and knowledge you need to continue onto your Honours degree. You will study a range of subjects that will underpin your future study and also gain valuable experience of university life, with full access to campus facilities. Successful completion of the year allows you to progress straight onto Level 4 of this course. Please note that a £2000 Path to Success bursary is available to all UK foundation year students, which is non-repayable.

LLB (Hons) at UWL video - thumbnail

Select your desired study option, then pick a start date to see relevant course information:

Study options:
We support flexible study by offering some of our courses part-time or via distance learning. To give you real world experience before you graduate, we also offer some courses with a placement or internship. All available options are listed here. Your choices may affect some details of your course, such as the duration and cost per year. Please re-check the details on this page if you change your selection.

Start date:

If your desired start date is not available, try selecting a different study option.

Why study Law with Foundation Year with us?

Why study Law with Foundation Year with us?

What our students say…

The lecturers are amazing and they're what makes the Law course so successful. They're dedicated and eager to bring out the best in students.

Sandy Duffy
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Mock courtroom opened by Lord Finkelstein
The UWL law course offers placement opportunities for students
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Course detail & modules

Course detail & modules

As you work towards attaining your LLB degree, you will develop a thorough understanding of the complexities of the legal system and enhance key skills to help you navigate your new career. The LLB Law course is the first step towards obtaining the necessary knowledge to embark on the subsequent professional qualifications to become either a solicitor or a barrister.

Our law course lets you focus on applying knowledge in practice, using real-world legal scenarios. All modules are taught with reference to current legal practice, in order to keep you up to date with ongoing changes in the profession. 

We aim to give you a well-rounded education in all aspects of the law, so you will experience:

  • close interaction with teaching staff
  • pre-course support to help you prepare for your studies
  • field trips to locations such as the European Court of Human Rights, Supreme Court, Old Bailey, Inns of Court
  • student trips overseas
  • regular mooting competitions – your chance to practise your skills in a simulated courtroom scene
  • the opportunity to compete for student prizes.

You will also have the chance to learn from the wisdom and experience of leading guest speakers, including academics, barristers, judges and solicitors. Their expertise will raise your awareness of how the law operates in the real world.

Throughout your degree, you will be encouraged to gain work experience that allows you to put what you have learned into context in a professional work environment. You could work with an agency, such as the Citizens Advice Bureau or the Free Representation Network, Ealing Law Centre, West London Equality Centre and several other local and national services.

Foundation year

There are many reasons for joining a foundation year course; you may not have the exact subjects or grades at A level to meet the entry requirements, you may have been living abroad or want to change direction with your career. Whatever your starting point, the foundation year offers a firm grounding in the skills and knowledge that you will need to get the most from your studies and thrive at university. Successful completion of the foundation year allows you to progress straight onto Level 4 of this course. 

Compulsory modules

  • Introduction to Liability

    The object of this module is to introduce you to the essential elements of legal liability in a range of different situations involving both individual liability and corporate liability. The module includes an introduction to contract law and the essential criteria in establishing an enforceable contract, together with an examination of liability in tort, examining, in particular, the tort of negligence. There is also an examination of vicarious liability and how this doctrine is applied to a range of very different circumstances. Additionally, the module includes an introduction to Company law, Agency and Directors’ duties. The module includes an introduction to problem-solving skills, applying legal principles to different scenarios.

  • Introduction to Law and Order

    This module will provide you with an overview of a range of issues relating to law and order. You will study key approaches to understanding the meaning of law and order and its role in society. The module will also consider the ways in which law and order is maintained (including the extent to which it can be justifiably maintained) as well as how the legal process adjudicates on law and order.

  • Study Skills for Success

    This module will enable you to read critically, present an argument, and distinguish between the quality and suitability of materials. It will prepare you to use and evaluate a range of evidence sources throughout your degree.

  • Personalised Learning

    The Personalised Learning module is intended to equip you with the study skills needed to successfully progress onto level 4, the first year of undergraduate study. Tutor group sessions are an integral part of the module, where you will consolidate your learning and frame it in the context of your subject area. The module will focus on various aspects of study skills, such as those skills related to reading and writing, learning approaches, problem-solving techniques, critical thinking, researching, referencing, plagiarism, legal research and time management.

  • Introduction to Mooting

    The module is an introduction to mooting skills and public speaking. The first aim is to enable you to develop the skills of presenting arguments in a structured, confident and articulate manner. The second aim of the module is to enable you to conduct independent research on a subject within your brief. The third aim of the module is to further develop problem-solving techniques, including the identification and application of relevant law to factual situations.

  • Understanding Justice

    This module explores the following aspects of Understanding Justice:

    1. The Criminal Justice Systems - in particular, the “justice” element of it
    2. Theoretical views on the concept of justice
    3. Key perspectives of justice, equality and rights
    4. Moral aspects of justice are considered, and as well as studying
    5. The structure of the administration of justice in England and Wales and internationally
    6. Concepts of justice to broader themes, such as killing, stealing and lying.

Compulsory modules

  • Constitutional Law

    This module is designed to enable students to develop an understanding of the key principles and core concepts underpinning constitutional law. The aims of the module are as follows:

    1) Understand what a constitution is and why it is necessary

    2) Understand the key characteristics of constitutions

    3) Understand the importance of constitutional principles

    4) Develop an understanding of the different sources of constitutional law

    5) Develop an understanding of the constitutional sources of the powers available to different governing institutions

  • Contract Law

    The module examines the key areas of contract law including; formation of contract, consideration, terms of contracts, exemption clauses, vitiating factors, misrepresentation and remedies for breach. It aims to develop skills in the areas of legal problem solving and communication of this in a clear and professional manner.

  • Criminal Law - Concepts and Foundations of Criminal Law

    The first aim of this module is to enable you to understand certain key aspects of criminal law, such as the criminal process, actus reus, mens rea, legal capacity and the main offences against the person and to consider possible reforms in the law. The second aim of the module is to further develop problem-solving techniques, including the identification and application of relevant law to factual situations.

  • Criminal law – Fraud, Offences against Property and Defences

    The first aim of this module is to enable you to understand certain key aspects of the criminal offences of fraud, theft, criminal damage, robbery, burglary and handling plus the main related defences available to defendants, and to consider possible reforms in the law. The second aim of the module is to further develop problem-solving techniques, including the identification and application of relevant law to factual situations.

  • English Legal System

    This module is designed to enable you to develop an understanding of the English Legal System. The aims of the module are as follows:

    1) Understand the basic structure of the English Legal System

    2) Understand the different sources of law within the English Legal System

    3) Understand the various roles performed by key institutions and people within the English Legal System

    4) Develop an understanding of the criminal trial process, including the roles of the police and judges with respect to sentencing

    5) Develop an understanding of the civil justice system.

  • Public Law

    This module is designed to enable you to develop an understanding of public law. The aims of the module are as follows:

    1) Understand the main institutions involved in government

    2) Understand the linkage between constitutional law and administrative law

    3) Understand the sources of public law

    4) Develop an understanding of the main principles of public law such as the rule of law (including the principle of legality and due process), the separation of powers, Parliamentary sovereignty, Parliamentary accountability of the Executive, representative democracy and responsible government

    5) Develop an understanding of the key mechanisms available under administrative justice

    6) Develop an understanding of Judicial Review – the various hurdles, the procedure and the grounds for Judicial Review.

You will study five compulsory modules plus a choice of 1 x optional module.


Compulsory modules

  • Equity and Trusts

    This module includes the study of both Equity and the law of Trusts in English Law. It introduces the concept of equity and explores the creation of equitable interests and the rules applicable to their transfer. It provides you with a knowledge and understanding of the trust mechanism and the rules which apply to its creation and operation. This module enables you to identify and analyse the different types of trust, examining the distinctions between express and implied trusts and the circumstances in which are expressly created and the circumstances in which implied trusts arise, together with the importance of such trusts and their application.

  • European Union (EU) Law

    This module is designed to enable you to develop an understanding of the English and European Legal Systems. The aims of the module are as follows:

    1) Understand the basic structure of the European Union

    2) Develop an understanding of the sources of law in Europe

    3) Understand the various roles performed by key law-making institutions in Europe

    4) Understand the key principles of EU law, including supremacy, direct effect, indirect effect and state liability

    5) Understand the Court of Justice of the EU and references under Art 267 TFEU

    6) Understand EU law relating to freedom of movement of goods and of workers.

  • Land Law

    This module will deal with the main principles of Land Law. Land law deals with the rights to use, alienate, or exclude others from land. You will focus on the creation and determination of leases, encumbrances over land, in particular easements, the law of mortgages and the creation and passing of freehold restrictive covenants.

  • Property Law

    Property law is the area of law that focuses on the various forms of ownership in real property (land) and personal property. Thus, property refers to legally protected claims to land and personal property. This module explores the respective concepts of property law in English Law, including Equity. You will explore and critically consider the way in which people – often several at the same time - acquire rights over land, and how disputes over these rights can be avoided, and if not, avoided then resolved. The principles of the Land Registration Act 2002 will be a key part of the module.

  • Tort Law

    The aims of the module are to:

    (a) equip you with appropriate and relevant substantive and contextual knowledge of the rules, principles and policy factors underpinning the development and application of Tort Law in England and Wales

    (b) enable you to conduct research using appropriate information technology (IT), including statistics and other numerical data, in order to resolve problems caused by breaches of Tort related obligations and to maintain and update your expertise

    (c) help you develop an understanding of how interpersonal interests are affected and protected by the Law of Torts

    (d) facilitate the active development of skills in order to be able to make use of the process by which disputes involving Tort law are resolved.

Optional modules

  • Legal Practice, Ethics and Regulation

    This module focuses on legal practice, ethics and regulations which will enable you to undertake effective undergraduate study of law whilst instilling you with the skills required for a law or law-related career, including basics such as advocacy, presenting, legal research, debating, critical thinking and group work. This module will look at how legal services are organised, provided and regulated in England and Wales, aspects of employability in the legal work environment and professional ethics. You will be provided with opportunities to become familiar with a range of research methods, writing styles and legal documentation. You will be encouraged to participate and undertake active student practitioner refection.

  • Mooting and Advocacy

    The module aims to enable you to undertake effective undergraduate study of law whilst instilling them with the skills required in the areas of oral presentation skills, advocacy and mooting. You will be provided with opportunities to become familiar with a range of legal research skills and drafting skills in the context of advocacy and mooting.

You can choose six modules from:


Optional modules

  • Evidence Law

    The module is a study of substantive principles and underlying theories of the Law of Evidence. The first aim of this module is to enable you to:

    (a) to have a working understanding of the rules of evidence in civil and criminal proceedings.

    (b) to appreciate the effect of evidential rules on procedures and outcomes in litigation.

    (c) to understand (in outline) the historical factors that have contributed to current evidential rules, and to appreciate the context for modern adaptations including the political and social pressures.

    (d) to appreciate the rationale for the rules.

    (e) to critically analyse the application of the rules.

    The second aim of the module is to further develop problem-solving techniques, including the identification and application of relevant law, to factual situations.

  • Public International Law

    This module is a study of Public International Law in the contemporary world. International Law is the normative system or body of legally binding rules that govern states in their relationships with each other, as well as other subject entities such as international organisations, and exceptionally, individuals.

  • Company Law

    This module develops a critical understanding of the legal framework in which modern companies operate and in particular, it examines the nature, formation, constitution, capital structure, internal affairs, management and insolvency of different companies in the context of modern business practice.

  • Employment Law

    The first aim of this module is to enable you to understand certain key aspects of employment law, including the employment protection given to individuals and what remedies are available if these provisions are not complied with. The second aim of the module is to build on the knowledge of contract law that you will have studied at level one and to apply this knowledge in a practical context. The final aim of the module is to further develop the problem-solving techniques, including the identification and application of relevant law, which you have been introduced to whilst studying modules at levels 4 and 5.

  • Intellectual Property Law

    The module will introduce you to the key areas in the law relating to Intellectual Property, including copyright, patents and trademarks.

  • Sports Law

    The module examines many key areas of sports law including; the meaning of 'sports law', the role of the sports governing bodies, employment law in a sporting context including unfair dismissal and discrimination, negligence in a sporting context, criminal law in relation to sports, anti-doping provisions and the impact of EU Law in relation to sport.

  • Cyber Crime

    This module aims to introduce you to the twenty-first-century offence of cybercrime and the theoretical suppositions underpinning it. It explores the definition, regulation, typologies, methods, categories and patterns of victimisation. It also critically examines law enforcement, regulation and legal issues in digital forensic acquisition.

  • International Environment Law

    The module is designed to explore, examine and evaluate the core legal principles and concepts underpinning international environmental law, policy and its regulatory structure. This will be undertaken in the context of the wider political, ecological and economic issues. In particular, the core sources of international law (including EU Law) relevant to environmental protection, the international institutions engaged in its development, alongside the respective legal issues involved with implementation and enforcement of environmental crime will be explored.

    The UK context will be included, alongside the relationship between human rights and the environment, and concepts such as environmental crime. It will be of special benefit if you wish to practice as a lawyer in private practice who will increasingly encounter oil, gas or energy legal issues connected to the protection of the environment, especially through the mechanism of environmental impact assessments.

    You will also be able to attend a series of lectures given not only by academics but also by practitioners in the Energy sector. This will further enable you to network with speakers from Law firms and energy organisations such as Exxon, British Gas, Shell and EDF energy company who it is intended to invite to address students.

  • Commercial and Consumer Law

    The object of this module is to introduce you to the law relating to commercial and consumer law, an area that affects us all. The aim of this module is to enable you to fully understand and contextualise the legal principles relating to selected commercial and consumer transactions and how these impact businesses and consumers.

  • Civil Litigation and Practice

    This module enables you to understand the most common actions and procedures in civil litigation and practice (i.e. it provides context to the law already studied on the degree and complements the study of law, process and procedure covered in other modules on the LLB such as Contract Law, and Tort).

    • To enable you to understand the way in which the law and procedure underpin legal practice

    • To encourage critical awareness of the development of the legal system and its changing nature

    • To further develop your problem-solving techniques including identification of the relevant legal issues and procedures

    • To further develop your legal skills such as interviewing, drafting, writing, advocacy and negotiation.

    • You will be encouraged to participate in the Community Advice Project run by the School of Law and Criminology.

  • Community Legal Advice

    The module provides an innovative approach to learning legal skills and culture by involving you in the practical legal and non-legal sectors within the community and the practical legal world generally. The module is both experience-based and academic; you will learn by engaging in practical learning activities. Your learning will be supported by competent supervision, guided reflection on learning, and classroom learning activities. The module culminates in the production of a full research project.

  • Immigration Law

    Aim 1 - The study of Immigration Law as an option in the final year of the LLB will provide a foundation for the further study of this complex and fast-changing area of law which is political, socio-economic and discriminatory. You will understand the rules which apply to a wide cross-section of the public and businesses in navigating a safe passage through the complexities of the ever-changing immigration system, for the purposes of leaving a country of origin, entering and staying in the UK, visiting, working, marrying, settling and acquiring citizenship or refugee status plus family relocation.

    Aim 2 - This course will provide a foundation from which you will be able to understand the rules and principles which apply to working in the UK, fulfilling personal and family immigration aims, e.g. to visit or study, to work or invest, or to make the UK their home and become British Citizens. The module will also explore the rules which regulate the decisions of the Home Office and UK Visas and Immigration Service within the systems established by the government for the control and administration of immigration to the UK.

    Aim 3 - You will come to understand how the entire immigration system is set up both in the UK and overseas posts and will be introduced to the specialist skills required to deal with the unique circumstances in which immigrants apply for asylum and protection from a breach of their human rights.

    Aim 4 - You will study the law and immigration rules as they relate to all non-British Citizens and EU citizens and will learn about the workings of the administrative machinery for dealing with immigration problems in the UK and overseas. You will become familiar with government websites dealing with immigration applications and will consider the many routes to finding a remedy for the problems facing the clients as well as familiarity with a wide range of online resources.

  • International Human Rights

    This module will explore how human rights theory has developed (both up to and since) the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. The expansion of rights-based arguments from Thomas Paine through to contemporary theory will be discussed, as well as the expansion in the international law of rights such as the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and other international human rights treaties. Further issues include the rights of indigenous peoples and issues around global development and social justice. By the end of the module, you will have explored the specific philosophical and theoretical literature on human rights and have acquired an understanding of the historical development of rights-based arguments. You will have learned to evaluate a broad range of issues and contexts related to the national, regional and international human rights doctrines, their tensions and their application, to contextualise the issues of politics and morality to a given human rights question.

  • Family Law

    The module is a study of key concepts and academic views of Family law. The first aim of the module is to enable you to understand certain key aspects of family law, including understanding the nature of a familial relationship with particular emphasis on the concept of marriage, civil partnership and cohabitation. The second aim of the module is to build on the knowledge of family law and apply the same to the breakdown of a marriage, civil partnership and cohabitation with particular emphasis on domestic violence, financial provision for the parties and the welfare of any children. The third aim of the module is to further develop an understanding of certain family law concepts and the distinction between private family law and public family law, through case law and legislation. The final aim of the module is to develop the ability to identify and apply the relevant law to factual situations.

Entry requirements

Entry requirements

72 UCAS points required from level 3 qualifications

These can include:

  • A-Levels at grades B and C (if you have two A-Levels) or grades D, D and D (if you have three), or above
  • BTEC Extended Diploma with Merit, Merit, Pass
  • Access to HE Diploma
  • T-Levels

You also need GCSE English and Maths (grade 9 – 4 / A* - C) or Level 2 equivalents.

Looking for LLB (Hons) Law without Foundation Year?

View course
Whether you are changing career or don't have the exact subjects and grades required for this course, you might want to choose this course with a foundation year. This will give you an extra year's study to prepare you for the standard degree programme, where you can go on to graduate with a full Honours degree. Follow the link to see full details of the course with foundation year.

You may be eligible for a student loan to cover the cost of tuition fees, or a maintenance loan. Additional funding is available to some types of students, such as those with dependants and disabled students.

Looking for LLB (Hons) Law without Foundation Year?

View course
Whether you are changing career or don't have the exact subjects and grades required for this course, you might want to choose this course with a foundation year. This will give you an extra year's study to prepare you for the standard degree programme, where you can go on to graduate with a full Honours degree. Follow the link to see full details of the course with foundation year.
5.5 IELTS or above

You need to meet our English language requirement - a minimum of IELTS 5.5 for each of the four individual components (Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening). Visit our English language requirements page for information on other English language tests we accept.

You also need academic qualifications at the same level as UK applicants. In some countries where teaching is in English, we may accept local qualifications. Check for local equivalents

We offer pre-sessional English language courses if you do not meet these requirements.

Find out more about our English Language courses.

Looking for LLB (Hons) Law without Foundation Year?

View course
Whether you are changing career or don't have the exact subjects and grades required for this course, you might want to choose this course with a foundation year. This will give you an extra year's study to prepare you for the standard degree programme, where you can go on to graduate with a full Honours degree. Follow the link to see full details of the course with foundation year.

You may be eligible for a student loan to cover the cost of tuition fees, or a maintenance loan. Additional funding is available to some types of students, such as those with dependants and disabled students.

Looking for LLB (Hons) Law without Foundation Year?

View course
Whether you are changing career or don't have the exact subjects and grades required for this course, you might want to choose this course with a foundation year. This will give you an extra year's study to prepare you for the standard degree programme, where you can go on to graduate with a full Honours degree. Follow the link to see full details of the course with foundation year.
Fees & funding

Fees & funding

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September 2025 tuition fees


Foundation Year 1 - full-time UK (Home) student: £5,760, full-time international student: £16,250

Year 2 onwards (subject to change) - currently full-time UK (Home) student: £9,250, full-time international student: £16,250 

Please note:

  • Fees for the 2026/27 academic year and onwards may be subject to Government regulation and change.
  • Tuition fees are charged for each year of your course. If your course runs for two years or more, you will need to pay the fee for each academic year at the start of that year.
  • If your course runs for less than two years, the cost above is for your full course and you will need to pay the full fee upfront.
  • If no fee is shown above then the fees for this course are not available yet. Please check again later for updates.

Funding your studies

You may be eligible for a student loan to cover the cost of tuition fees, or a maintenance loan. Additional funding is available to some types of students, such as those with dependants and disabled students.

Foundation year bursary

If you are a UK student joining a foundation year course with UWL, you will receive a £2000 Path to Success bursary to support your studies. This is not a loan and does not need to be repaid. You will receive £500 per year subject to your attendance, engagement and progression through your studies.

To find out more, explore our Undergraduate scholarships and bursaries page.

{{ formatCurrencyValue(currentVariantData.field_p_cv_int_main_fee.name) }} per year*

September 2025 tuition fees


Foundation Year 1 - full-time UK (Home) student: £5,760, full-time international student: £16,250

Year 2 onwards (subject to change) - currently full-time UK (Home) student: £9,250, full-time international student: £16,250 

Please note:

  • Fees for the 2026/27 academic year and onwards may be subject to Government regulation and change.
  • Tuition fees are charged for each year of your course. If your course runs for two years or more, you will need to pay the fee for each academic year at the start of that year.
  • If your course runs for less than two years, the cost above is for your full course and you will need to pay the full fee upfront.
  • If no fee is shown above then the fees for this course are not available yet. Please check again later for updates.

International students - funding your studies

We offer scholarships for international students including International Ambassador Scholarships. 

Further information about funding and financial support for international students is available from the UK Council for International Student Affairs.

 

Teaching staff

Teaching staff

Philipp Elliott-Wright

Professor Philipp Elliot-Wright

Philipp is Head of the School of Law and Professor, BA (Hons), MA, LLM, PhD, PGCertEd, SFHEA, FRSA, Barrister (NP). Philipp is also responsible for the teaching of undergraduate Land Law and postgraduate Research Methodology.

For over two decades, he has participated in various consultations with the Home Office and Health and Safety Executive in the on-going formulation of the legal regulation of firearms and explosives. Philipp has also been involved with research into the evolution of judicial independence and the rule of law in England and has contributed to published literature on the contemporary development of the Chinese judiciary in the twenty-first century.

Presently, Philipp’s research highlights the use of student analytics to promote a student-centric approach to maximise the full range of student engagement in the study of Law, ensuring students fulfil their potential.

Philipp is Head of the School of Law and Professor, BA (Hons), MA, LLM, PhD, PGCertEd, SFHEA, FRSA, Barrister (NP). Philipp is also responsible for the teaching of undergraduate Land Law and postgraduate Research Methodology.

For over two decades, he has participated in various consultations with the Home Office and Health and Safety Executive in the on-going formulation of the legal regulation of firearms and explosives. Philipp has also been involved with research into the evolution of judicial independence and the rule of law in England and has contributed to published literature on the contemporary development of the Chinese judiciary in the twenty-first century.

Presently, Philipp’s research highlights the use of student analytics to promote a student-centric approach to maximise the full range of student engagement in the study of Law, ensuring students fulfil their potential.

Study & career progression

Study & career progression

A woman in a business suit looking through a folder

LLB Law course graduates could go on to work as a:

  • barrister
  • chartered legal executive (England and Wales)
  • paralegal
  • solicitor.

If you discover an area of special interest during your time at UWL, you can opt to further your studies with a postgraduate course. See our postgraduate courses. You can take your research further still with a PhD.

How to apply

How to apply

Alumni

Sunil Sheth

Sunil Sheth

Sunil, an alumnus of UWL Law School and a qualified solicitor. He advises clients on international tax and estate planning, wealth management and private funds and in sectors including financial services, real estate, infrastructure, hotels and hospitality.

He is a trustee of the disability rights charity Sense International. He is also the Chair of Anti-Slavery International, a UK charity established in 1839 and regarded as the oldest human rights organisation in the world. He is a trustee of The Hospice Biographers, a charity which offers terminally ill patients the chance to have their life stories professionally recorded on audio for their pleasure and relief, and for their families to hear their voices and memories for generations to come.

He was also a Founder of the Society of Asian Lawyers and Chair of the organisation for many years.

Ilia Martynov profile image

Ilia Martynov

Having completed his undergraduate Bachelor of Laws (LLB) at the University of West London with a First-Class Honour In October 2022 Ilia began his LLM programme and became a Master of Law candidate at the University of Cambridge (Fitzwilliam college).

Since joining Sterling Law in March 2022 as a Legal Assistant, Ilia started working for Immigration and Commercial departments. At the Immigration department, Ilia is focused on complex immigration matters, asylum cases, and business immigration. At the Commercial department, Ilia is assisting solicitors in companies and charity registration, civil litigation, and other matters. His areas of expertise include:

  • commercial Law
  • immigration Law
  • human Rights
  • intellectual Property
Annetta Jackson

Annetta Jackson

Annetta currently serves as a Program Officer at the Directorate of Gender Affairs with responsibility for Legal and Institutional Frameworks. She is also a Storyteller at Intersect Antigua and a Black Feminist Fund Fellow.

She received a Legal Education Certificate from the Council for Legal Education in April 2022 and was admitted to practice as an Attorney-at-Law of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court in Antigua and Barbuda in November 2022.

Annetta oversaw the abolition of the death penalty in Barbados and six Eastern Caribbean States: Dominica, Grenada, St Vincent & The Grenadines, St. Lucia, St. Kitts & Nevis and Antigua & Barbuda.

Kelly Johnson

Kelly Johnson


Kelly has always been interested in business and the work that goes on behind the scenes that allow major companies to grow and reach their full potential.

While living in South Africa, she started her own business which allowed her to acquire real-world knowledge of the challenges that businesses face.

Her extensive background in hospitality has enabled her to quickly build a rapport with clients and efficiently satisfy their requests in a fast-paced environment.

Emma Hughes

Emma Hughes

Prior to beginning pupillage, Emma worked at a leading London law firm; dealing primarily with care proceedings featuring non-accidental injury, domestic abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, forced marriage, and radicalisation.

Emma received an Access to the Bar Award and a Jules Thorn Scholarship from Middle Temple. 

Emma is the Head of the Mentoring Programme at Bridging the Bar (BTB),  a charity dedicated to diversifying the Bar’s profile by creating opportunities for those from underrepresented backgrounds. Emma sits on the Bar Council Race Working Group and currently serves as Middle Temple Young Barrister's Association President.  

A man and a woman in suits talking at a table

Shadia Ousta

Shadia began her LLB after completing the LPC in 2007. She began a placement at Howe and Co in Ealing before becoming a paralegal and then a trainee at the firm. After a varied career in private and government practice, she is now the Senior Community Services Solicitor at Islington Council. Her areas of practice include:

  • administrative and public law
  • human rights
  • immigration - nationality and citizenship
  • litigation - general
  • higher courts rights - civil accredited
  • personal injury.

Employability

At the School of Law, we strive to offer valuable opportunities to enhance your employability. We have a module dedicated to employability and professional skills available to all law students at all levels. Last year our students benefited from the following:

A female lawyer with a folder in front of an old building

Opportunities

students attending a legal workshop at Sky studios

Events

  • Careers fair
  • Guidance on CVs and professional qualification routes
  • Sky legal insight day
  • Interviews in the legal sector
An academic conference, during which a speaker is presenting to a large group

Talks

 

Guest lecturers

Michael Mansfield profile pic

Michael Mansfield KC

One of the best-known barristers in the United Kingdom. A radical activist lawyer and human rights defender.

He has variously represented the Guildford Four, the Birmingham Six, individuals wrongly convicted of IRA bombings, the Angry Brigade, Ruth Ellis (the last woman to be hanged in Great Britain) in a posthumous appeal, Stephen Lawrence’s family, Barry George at the Inquest of tv presenter Jill Dando, Arthur Scargill, and striking miners, Mohamed al-Fayed in the inquest of his son Dodi and Diana Princess of Wales, the families of Charles de Menezes, and of Mark Duggan, both shot by police, the families of the Hillsborough stadium disaster and those bereaved by the sinking of the Marchioness, and the Bloody Sunday shootings.

Recently, he was engaged by the family of Emiliano Sala, the footballer who died in a plane crash on the way to join Brighton Football Club. He is also representing the survivors and bereaved of the Grenfell Tower fire.

Image attribute - Brian O'Neill, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

image of andrew ballheimer

Andrew Ballheimer

Andrew joined A&O in 1987, became a partner in 1994 and has over 32 years of post-qualification experience in mergers and acquisitions and in capital markets (both international and domestic). His client base includes FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 companies and banks in the UK and major public and private corporations and financial institutions outside the UK.

Andrew Ballheimer is a Senior Adviser with Teneo. Prior to joining Teneo, Andrew was the Global Managing Partner of Allen & Overy LLP (the 550 partner, 6,000 person, global elite law firm with 43 offices around the world).

Tan Ikram profile pic

Tan Ikram CBE

Tan qualified as a barrister in 1990 and as a solicitor in 1993 becoming a partner in IBB solicitors defending complex fraud. He moved into a judicial career in 2007, starting as a deputy district judge, postgraduate medical education and training board, then a legal assessor for the nursing and midwifery council. In 2017 he was appointed Deputy Senior District Judge authorised to hear extradition and terrorism cases. Since 2015 he has also been an associate judge and HM Coroner of Her Majesty’s Court of the Sovereign Base Areas, Cyprus.

Clive Coleman profile pic

Clive Coleman

Drawing on his years as a practicing barrister, Clive covered a vast range of domestic and international legal stories and issues including 2019’s momentous Supreme Court prorogation case, Brexit, the growing courts backlog, the Barclay brothers ‘Ritz’ dispute, GDPR, the VW emissions scandal, phone hacking, Sir Cliff Richard v BBC, and the Hillsborough tragedy inquests.

Prior to becoming BBC Legal Correspondent, Clive was for six years the presenter of Radio 4’s flagship legal analysis programme ‘Law In Action’, and presented a raft of BBC programmes including Panorama ‘The Death of Kiss and Tell’, on the rise of privacy protection under the Human Rights Act.

Overseas trips

Law students have for many years been offered the opportunity of expanding their knowledge and experience of other cultures and historical sites critical to understanding the development of international law.
Past law students visited:

train track leading to the Auschwitz concentration camp building

Krakow and Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp

The Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp is known as a symbol of the Holocaust and the events that took place there helped trigger the foundation of international legal enforcement of human rights and laws to prevent and punish the perpetrators of such.

During World War I, over 1 million people lost their lives there, primarily Jewish, but also Poles, Romanian, and Russian. The site has been preserved, and students participate in a day-long formal guided tour.

colourful tulips set against the backdrop of buildings surrounded by water

The Hague

Established in 2002, the International Criminal Court has the jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for the international crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Often referred to as the World Court, the International Court of Justice is the main judicial organ of the United Nations. 

Both courts are visited, with official guides and interactive events with court staff. Additionally, students receive a tour and presentation from the staff at the Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone. Students also have the opportunity on the day of arrival to enjoy the beautiful city of Amsterdam with its canals and museums.

cobbled road in Nuremberg with tall colourful old building on either side

Nuremberg

At the end of the Second World War Nuremberg was the site of the first-ever international war crime trials that helped lay the basis of all modern human rights legislation. The main trial of 24 of the most central participants in the Holocaust took a year to complete. 

Students visit the original courtrooms as part of an official guided tour including interactive workshops and presentations. Nuremberg itself is a beautiful walled medieval city complete with a castle and students have a day to enjoy its shops and many attractions.

The Solicitors Qualifying Exam (SQE)

The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) changed its qualification requirements for solicitors last year. The new Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) route requires you to pass the SQE 1 and SQE 2, complete the equivalent of two years of qualifying work experience (this can be through a training contract or a placement), as well as meet the character and suitability requirements set by the SRA. 

Our LLB Law degree provides you with a good foundation for the Solicitors Qualifying Exam (SQE) and for those who wish to go on to qualify as a barrister. We will fully support our students who wish to qualify as a solicitor. We can also support you to get Qualifying Work Experience via our placement team and our legal advice clinic. 

Find out more about the Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE).

The mock courtroom at the University of West London

Important notes for applicants

Disclaimer

*Modern universities - defined as higher education institutions that were granted university status in, and subsequent to, 1992.

**The National Student Survey 2023 and 2024 - Average of answers to all questions by registered student population. Excludes specialist institutions.

Testimonials - our students or former students provided all of our testimonials - often a student from the course but sometimes another student. For example, the testimonial often comes from another UWL student when the course is new.

Optional modules - where optional modules are offered they will run subject to staff availability and viable student numbers opting to take the module.

Videos - all videos on our course pages were accurate at the time of filming. In some cases a new Course Leader has joined the University since the video was filmed.

Availability of placements - if you choose a course with placement/internship route we would like to advise you that if a placement/internship opportunity does not arise when you are expected to undertake the placement then the University will automatically transfer you to the non-internship route, this is to ensure you are still successful in being awarded a degree.