University of Sydney Handbooks - 2016 Archive

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Welcome

Dean of The University of Sydney Law School, Professor Joellen Riley

An education at Sydney Law School prepares you for a varied and exciting career in a range of professional settings. Both the Sydney LLB and the Sydney JD, along with our specialist master's degrees and graduate diplomas, develop the skills needed to work in a national, transnational and international legal environment.

The Sydney LLB, delivered as a combined law degree, continues to be one of Australia’s most sought-after degree programs. Our alternative pathways ensure that each year we welcome students from a wide range of backgrounds, whether they be school leavers or those who have transferred after recent tertiary study.

Our postgraduate coursework program in law is one of the largest in Australia, and offers a wide range of units of study. About 80 percent of these units are taught intensively, a popular and rigorous form of teaching that permits candidates to complete the face-to-face teaching coursework of a unit in a short period of time.

We are a leading research-based law school, ranking first in Australia and sixth internationally as measured by the Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN).We also have one of the largest enrolments of PhD candidates in law in the country and remain strongly committed to research-based teaching and learning.

There are now more opportunities to engage in overseas study at Sydney Law School than ever before. LLB and JD students can engage in exchange study with our partners in North America, Europe and Asia. Masters students can sample offshore study in locations including China, Nepal, Japan, Malaysia and Indonesia, or in the United Kingdom, Germany or the Netherlands through the Sydney Law School in Europe Program.

Legal studies open up many opportunities. While you might choose to practise as a barrister or solicitor, our graduates also become corporate counsel, government policy advisers, teachers, business executives, novelists, journalists and artists. Many graduates work with international organisations, such as the United Nations or the World Bank, or with pro-bono legal services. Indeed, well over 50 percent of our law graduates do not practise in the traditional legal profession within a few years of graduating.

I hope you enjoy your studies at Sydney Law School and benefit from the ‘complete university experience’ that Sydney has to offer.

Best wishes,

Professor Joellen Riley
Dean of the Faculty of Law