Overview

The JD is a postgraduate level law degree that is recognised for the purpose of admission to practise law. A 144 unit of credit program, it may be taken on a full-time or part-time basis. It is made up of 96 units of credit of core courses, 6 units of … For more content click the Read More button below. Students will acquire a sound knowledge base in the discipline of Law due to their completion of a sequence of core courses and a wide range of elective courses. The JD is a flexible program and can be studied on a full-time or part-time basis. Students can choose their rate of study within program rules (ie. can move between full-time and part-time study). The maximum duration is 8 years.

Learning Outcomes

1.
Conduct legal research and legal writing tasks. For example: Professional research skills, including formulating research strategies to address complex legal problems and/or legal policy tasks; Academic research skills, including formulating independent research strategies for critical and/or theoretical writing; Concise writing; Extended writing, including the completion of substantial research assessment tasks; and Professional writing, including writing for specialist and non-specialist audiences.
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2.
Engage in reform-oriented analysis of law and policy. For example: Ability to critique existing law in light of broader perspectives, current legal impact and future needs; Ability to contribute to reform processes; and Ability to analyse and evaluate recent developments in professional practice, broadly defined.
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3.
Demonstrate advanced professional communication skills. For example: Oral communication across a range of contexts, including adversarial and non-adversarial dispute resolution, client/advice focused contexts and professional forums; Written communication in various formats and styles, including writing for specialist and non-specialist audiences; General presentation capacities; Legal presentation capacities; Empathetic listening skills; and Cross-cultural communication, including with Indigenous people.
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4.
Apply interdisciplinary perspectives to legal issues, in particular, the ability to bring perspectives from appropriate prior disciplinary experience to bear on responding to legal problems, legal policy questions, and/or critical/theoretical analysis of law and legal institutions.
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5.
Demonstrate an understanding and appreciation of historical and contemporary indigenous legal issues. For example: Colonial dispossession; Historical and continuing impact of the law on Indigenous Australians; Indigenous rights, sovereignty and recognition in the Constitution; Native title; Interactions with legal professionals and enforcement officers; Indigenous laws and justice mechanisms; and Cross-cultural communication issues.
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6.
Demonstrate an understanding and appreciation of legal knowledge in its broader contexts. For example: An integrated understanding of fundamental areas of legal knowledge for practice in NSW; An advanced understanding of the Australian legal system, including influential theories of law and justice; Contextual disciplinary understanding informed by interdisciplinary and theoretical perspectives, including those provided through prior tertiary learning; Theoretical perspectives underlying principles, concepts and professional practice; International and comparative approaches to law; Awareness of other jurisdictions and legal systems and understanding of their impact on local jurisdictions; Awareness of global legal practice broadly defined; Broader context of, and contemporary developments in legal practice broadly defined; An understanding of the historical development and contemporary manifestations of ethical and professional responsibilities and rules; Relationship between law and ethics, and theories of ethics applicable to legal practice broadly defined; Environmental issues; Race and diversity based issues; Poverty and social inequity/class based issues; Commercial issues; Employer/employee power imbalances; Gender and sexuality based issues; and Disability awareness.
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7.
Demonstrate an understanding and appreciation of principles of justice and the rule of law. For example: Tensions between law and morality and justice (as expanded below), both historically and in a contemporary context; Distributive justice, including social justice; Corrective justice; Justice as desert and retributive justice; Restorative justice; Justice through (Alternative) Dispute Resolution; Legal protection of rights, including by the Constitution; Obligations of the legal profession, broadly defined, including legal practitioners' duties to clients, the court and society; Due process and natural justice; The maintenance and operation of the rule of law; Constraints upon government power and the review and correction of government decisions; and The rule of law in context.
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8.
Interpret and analyse statutes. For example: Navigating and applying statutory enactments to novel problems in accordance with contemporary modes of statutory interpretation; Applying knowledge of the difference between interpretation of ordinary statutes and constitutions; Applying knowledge and ability to use extrinsic materials in the interpretation of statutes and resolution of and/or advice on novel problems; Developing a coherent body of knowledge and skills about the rules of statutory interpretation; The application of statutory interpretation techniques in the context of problem-solving to generate appropriate analytical responses to statutory issues; and Analysing the relationship between statutory interpretation and human rights instruments in different jurisdictions.
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9.
Engage in advanced legal reasoning. For example: Case analysis; Problem-solving skills; Identifying and articulating legal issues; Applying legal reasoning and research, and synthesised legal knowledge to generate appropriate and independent responses to legal issues or problems; Engaging in critical analysis and making a reasoned choice amongst alternatives, drawing on a integrated knowledge of legal categories, the legal system and institutions; Evaluating the appropriateness and effectiveness of either a specific course of action or a legal response more broadly, taking into account theoretical and/or critical perspectives; and Thinking creatively and independently in approaching legal issues or problems, generating appropriate responses that take into account both doctrinal and broader legal policy principles.
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10.
Demonstrate advanced professional interpersonal skills. For example: Collaboration skills; Ability to work as a member of a team; Respect for diversity; Dispute resolution; Understanding of formal legal rules; Appreciation of alternative and non-adversarial philosophies and practices; Understanding of lawyers' roles in disputes; and Understanding of power dynamics.
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11.
Demonstrate and adopt professional and ethical dispositions and values. For example: Professional disposition and values; Developing ability to exercise professional judgment; Ability to reflect on professional responsibilities of lawyers in promoting justice; Understanding the law's role in serving society; Understanding the value of community engagement; Ethical practice; Understanding of ethical approaches to decision-making; Developing ability to respond to ethical issues arising in legal practice; Working sensitively with clients from diverse backgrounds and with a range of needs; and Understanding prosecutors' and advocates' obligations both to the court and to the client, and judicial obligations to ensure a fair trial.
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12.
Demonstrate advanced professional capacity for self-management and autonomy. For example: Ability to engage in independent learning; Time management skills; Personal and professional development Reflective practice; Ability to reflect on and assess own capabilities and performance, including through self-assessment; Ability to use feedback; and Reflection on personal values in the professional role.
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Program Structure

Students must complete 144 UOC when taken as a standalone program.

  1. Core courses - 96 UOC
  2. Prescribed theory elective - 6 UOC
  3. Law elective courses - 42 UOC

Law Elective Courses42 Units of Credit:
Electives Maturity Requirements

Enrolment Disclaimer

Please note that this Handbook is a comprehensive catalogue of our offerings and includes courses that can be taken to satisfy program requirements irrespective as to their availability for a particular year. Availability of courses is best checked using filters on this site or on the class timetable site.

You are responsible for ensuring that you enrol in courses according to your program requirements and by following the advice of your Program Authority. myUNSW enrolment checks that you have met enrolment requirements such as pre-requisites for individual courses but not that you are enrolling in courses that will count towards your program requirements.

Admission Requirements

Entry Requirements

Minimum Entry Requirements

Program Requirements

Progression Requirements

For more information on university policy on progression requirements please visit Academic Progression

Associated Programs

Postgraduate Pathway

Graduate Diploma in Legal Professional Practice - GDLPP5213 - Legal Professional Practice
Master of Laws - LLM9201 - Law

Professional Outcomes

Accreditations

Legal Profession Admission Board

Additional Information

Juris Doctor with Distinction Policy

Students who complete the Juris Doctor Program will be eligible for the Juris Doctor with Distinction. 
To be awarded the Juris Doctor with Distinction, students:

  1. must achieve a Distinction WAM of 75%. The Distinction WAM will be calculated using the WAM from core courses as 60% and the WAM from elective courses as 40 %, of which courses completed at UNSW ONLY will count towards the Distinction WAM calculation.
  2. NOT been found guilty of plagiarism nor serious misconduct.
  3. NOT have more than one failure in the JD program.

 

Program Fees

At UNSW fees are generally charged at course level and therefore dependent upon individual enrolment and other factors such as student's residency status. For generic information on fees and additional expenses of UNSW programs, click on one of the following:

Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)