Layout print header[D]

LLM Masters in Law by Research

Full-time, Part-time

This course is subject to approval

Location • Collegiate Campus
Subject area • Law


By adding to My Courses you can compare courses and create a personalised prospectus.

This course is beneficial if you

• work in the legal profession
A masters qualification can contribute to your professional development. On this course you choose to research a specific area of law which means you can specialise in a particular field. This can enhance your career prospects.

• work with, or have an interest in, law
It is likely to boost your employability in an increasingly competitive market. It is a benefit if you are looking to join the legal profession as a solicitor or barrister and want to stand out from the crowd of undergraduates. It is also likely to help you if you are planning to specialise in a particular area of law you have studied on the course.

You choose the area of research for your thesis, although we are available to provide guidance. It is ideal if you want to become a specialist in a particular area of law or to develop your interest in a specific legal topic. You develop your research skills as well as the ability to produce in-depth and persuasive academic writing.

During the course you work largely independently but you are guided by an experienced supervisor in a supportive environment. You can access legal materials in our dedicated law library in the learning centre, which is open 24-hours a day during term time. Our IT systems are set up so that most of your learning and research can be done anywhere off campus where you have access to a suitable internet connection.

Study can be done in your own time so it can fit around your work, family and other commitments. Meetings with your supervisor can be organised at mutually convenient times.

Find out more about LLM Masters in Law by Research

Attendance

Full-time – one year
Part-time – two years
Flexible start dates

How to apply

Complete the application form available at www.shu.ac.uk/study/form

Fees – home and EU students

2012/13 academic year

Full-time – typically £4.080
Part-time – typically £2,040 a year

For further information on fees and funding see www.shu.ac.uk/funding

Assessment

Assessment is via the submission of a 30,000 word thesis, and a short viva examination, on an agreed legal topic.

Contact us

For more information please contact the course leader Dr Stephen Riley, Faculty of Development and Society, Sheffield Hallam University, Department of Law, Criminology and Community Justice, Collegiate Crescent Campus, Sheffield S10 2BP. Phone +44 (0)114 225 5749, fax +44 (0)114 225 2418, email s.riley@shu.ac.uk

Bookmark or share this page

| More

Lesley Klaff

Lesley Klaff

Senior lecturer in law

I have an LLB and an MA Socio-Legal Studies from the University of Sheffield, and I have been lecturing law at undergraduate and postgraduate level since 1982.

My teaching areas are the English legal system and legal and social theory. I consider myself to be a critical (academic) lawyer and this is reflected in the way I teach my modules. I urge my students to take a critical, contextual, and reflective view of the law and legal institutions.

My research interests include race discrimination, with particular emphasis on anti-Semitism, and the identity of the other, which deals with issues of racial and religious identity. I incorporate my research interests into my teaching. For example, in my English legal system module I discuss issues of race and gender discrimination in legal education, training, and practice, and in my legal and social theory module I discuss the ways in which the law constructs knowledge about race, as well as the ways in which race discrimination legislation lets down the very people whom it purports to protect.

My English legal system and social and legal theory modules are also influenced by my time in America, where I lectured law for seven years prior to my appointment at Sheffield Hallam. In English legal system, the American influence takes the form of appellate case analysis whereby students are taught to summarise an appellate case and critique it from a variety of jurisprudential perspectives. In the legal and social theory module, the American influence is evident in the teaching of American legal realism and critical legal theory, as well as in the use of US Supreme Court cases.

In addition to my teaching and administrative duties, I serve as a faith advisor on the University’s multi-faith chaplaincy. In that capacity, I organise the University’s annual Holocaust Memorial Day event and invite guest speakers. I am also the book review editor for the Journal for the Study of Anti-Semitism. My recent article on campus hate speech will appear in the autumn 2010 issue of Jewish Political Studies Review.

Close

Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, UK

Phone +44 (0)114 225 5555 | Fax +44 (0)114 225 4449

How we use cookies

Privacy policy

Freedom of information

Accessibility

Sitemap

Legal information