Why study Law?
Law creates the framework for how we interact with the world, and solve the issues that impact us within it. Flinders University offers a legal education that has both a deep foundation in history, and an unparalleled understanding of the challenges of our time.
With a focus on technology, health and social impact, our Law program offers more.
More support. More placements. More training. More skills. More innovation.
We prepare you to become not only a lawyer, but a leader.
Flinders Law provides the perfect balance between sound legal training, real-world experience, and future ready skills.
You will gain rigorous legal knowledge, practical and professional legal competencies, and the skills to successfully navigate the future – including creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship.
Ready to practise.
Flinders offers the only undergraduate legal practice degree in South Australia.
The Bachelor of Laws and Legal Practice satisfies both the academic and practical requirements to seek admission from the Supreme Court of South Australia to practise law in the state, which means you'll be able to get started as soon as you graduate.
Combine your Law degree with Arts, Business, International Relations and more.
No.1 in SA
in Law.
(2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities, public SA-founded universities only)
No.1 in SA
in Business & Management for learning resources and overall educational experiences.
(The Good Universities Guide 2024 (postgraduate), public SA-founded universities only)
Five Stars
in Law & Paralegal Studies for learner engagement and student support.
(The Good Universities Guide 2024 (postgraduate))
We’re preparing a new generation of graduates to embark on meaningful, rewarding future careers.
A suite of innovative core topics equip our graduates with the mindset and skills to adapt and thrive in a changing legal landscape. These topics include:
You’ll gain an in-depth understanding of changes in the world, and learn to analyse the impact and regulation of new technological developments - intersecting the law and legal practice.
At Flinders Legal Centre, our Law students have the opportunity to work with supervising solicitors and gain real experience - offering free, independent and confidential access to legal advice and information to members of the community.
Hosted by our Dean of Law, Professor Tania Leiman, Expect More of Law: The Podcast celebrates Law at Flinders University with stories from current students, alumni, and industry.
Our Law students have the opportunity to experience 'Law in a Digital Age', a unique offering in Australia.
If you choose to study Law at Flinders, you'll have the chance to learn how to make your very own online app. Our Law students team up with Computer Science students to bring their ideas to reality, and make apps that improve social justice in the community.
First-hand accounts from those who selected Flinders Law.
“The sense of community and support at Flinders Law is second to none. The lecturers and academics are passionate, experienced, immensely supportive and caring.”
Brayden Mann
Bachelor of Laws and Legal Practice
The choice of university for Flinders Law student Brayden Mann was not a simple one. The fact that Flinders is one of the few Australian universities providing Practical Legal Training (PLT), sat alongside other considerations.
“The sense of community and support at Flinders Law is second to none. The lecturers and academics are passionate, experienced, immensely supportive and caring.
On my first day at the ‘New in Law’ program I was introduced to my law mentor. Every first-year law student receives a mentor; an older Flinders Law student in the third or fourth year of their degree.”
In his first year, Brayden undertook the single day placement program at the Flinders Legal Advice Clinic (FLAC).
“I got to suit up, attend real client interviews and help create case files. Later in the degree, students have the opportunity to do FLAC placement where they work on real cases with real clients.”
We are constantly told that employers want employees with practical skills. Flinders Law has given Brayden those skills and the ability to apply them.
“Throughout my degree I have been developing a 21st Century mindset. While I am yet to decide on my career path, I want to keep my options open. Flinders Law allows me to do that."
“I chose Flinders Law because I liked how the legal practice component was embedded right from the start. I wanted to go beyond theory, and from our first year we learned practical skills.”
Ashley Ramachandran
Bachelor of Laws and Legal Practice
A year 12 teacher who pushed her to explore her boundaries led Ashley Ramachandran to combine a Bachelor of Laws and Legal Practice with a Bachelor of International Relations at Flinders University.
“Studying the law gives you power. It gives you analytical and critical skills. The law is in every part of our society, whether you’re buying a house, buying a car or buying a coffee. I never truly understood that until I studied law”.
Flinders’ Law is career focused. You’ll study real world issues, around topics including public law, professional ethics, administrative law and corporate law. For Ashley, it was important to learn practical skills early in her studies.
“I chose Flinders Law because I liked how the legal practice component was embedded right from the start. I wanted to go beyond theory, and from our first year we learned practical skills”.
Study at Flinders is hands on and inclusive. Lecturers and students interact and support each other.
“What makes Flinders special is the people. I have a great support network of friends. We truly do support each other in whatever we do, and the support from lecturers is amazing. You can undertake a law degree anywhere, but it’s the people at Flinders that get you through to the end”.
Ashley’s studies combine up-to-the-minute industry knowledge with sound practical skills, preparing her for a range of career opportunities.
“That’s what I like about this degree. When I graduate, I don’t just have one option. I have many options. It’s just whichever one I choose to take”.
Law brings hope to the disadvantaged, confidence to commercial ventures, rigour to politics and solid foundations to launch your career in a diverse range of fields.
Your degree is the first step towards a range of career opportunities both within and outside of the law.
Our graduates have found fulfilling careers as lawyers, barristers, policy officers and analysts in a range of areas such as media, property, human rights, criminal, environmental, family and corporate.
A law degree also opens the door to careers outside of the law including banking and finance, environmental protection and development, politics, marketing and communications and business management and leadership.
Pursue multiple passions and broaden your career prospects further, by choosing a combined degree.
Here are just some of the options.
SATAC code: | 214442 |
Course length: | 5 - 6 years full-time (or equivalent part-time) |
Prerequisites: |
None |
Location: | On campus, Bedford Park |
By combining studies in laws and legal practice with criminology, you will develop the professional legal skills to prepare you for a job in the legal profession and gain an understanding of how justice and society influence each other.
The combination prepares you for a broad range of careers in law but also government, leadership and educational settings.
SATAC code: | 214442 |
Course length: | 5.5 - 6 years full-time (or equivalent part-time) |
Prerequisites: |
None |
Location: | On campus, Bedford Park |
A laws and legal practice degree from Flinders satisfies the academic and practical requirements to practise law in South Australia.
Combining these studies with a Bachelor of International Relations opens the door to a multitude of careers in international organisations, aid and human rights, government, transnational crime, terrorism, and non-government organisations.
SATAC code: | 214442 |
Course length: | 5 - 6 years full-time (or equivalent part-time) |
Prerequisites: |
None |
Location: | On campus, Bedford Park |
Combining the Bachelor of Behavioural Science (Psychology) with law prepares you for occupations where law and psychology interact.
You will develop an understanding of human behaviour, motivation, relationships, communication and cognitive processes.
Better understand the actions of clients, judges, jurors and the changes to law, which will help you develop a stronger and more effective argument for your legal cases, and explore a social justice perspective for understanding human behaviour.
This combined program provides an accredited professional qualification in both law and psychology.
SATAC code: | 244111 |
Course length: | 5 - 6 years full-time (or equivalent part-time) |
Prerequisites: |
None |
Location: | On campus, Bedford Park |
By combining studies in laws and legal practice with business, you will develop the professional legal skills to prepare you for a job in the legal profession and gain an understanding of key issues that businesses deal with every day.
The combination prepares you for a broad range of careers in law but also business, government, leadership and not-for-profit settings.
The Juris Doctor (JD) is an internationally recognised professional legal qualification at masters level for graduates of other disciplines. It is offered fully online, allowing flexibility to balance your other commitments.
Flinders Law academic staff are recognised as leaders in their fields both in Australia and around the world. Our academics draw on their industry experience and legal scholarship to deliver innovative courses that prepare graduates for career success.
Tania Leiman
Associate Professor and Dean of Law
LLB (Adel), GDLP (SAIT), GCE(HE) (Flinders)
A leader and innovator in legal education, Tania is committed to producing modern law graduates equipped to adapt and thrive in the future job market. “The legal industry is going through a major transformation with the impact of technology fundamentally changing the way legal services are delivered,” she explains. “Flinders Law balances traditional legal teaching with new offerings that provide graduates with the skills to solve future problems at the intersection of law and technology”.
Tania’s current research looks at the legal implications of emerging driverless and mobility technologies. What will such technologies mean for individuals and society? How will we minimise the risks and maximise the opportunities they present? How can the law protect rights and avoid unjust or inequitable outcomes? She is also exploring the impact emerging technologies have on what lawyers do with her research findings shaping the curriculum and content taught at Flinders Law.
Tania is admitted as a barrister and solicitor in the Supreme Court of South Australia and the High Court of Australia and holds a current unrestricted practising certificate. She began teaching law at Flinders in 1994 and participates in the legal sub-group member the Australian Driverless Vehicle Initiative [ADVI]’s Policy & Risk Group, and is also a member of the award-winning Flinders Legal Advice Clinic. Tania has been the recipient of multiple teaching awards, including Faculty, Vice Chancellor’s and national Australian Government teaching excellence awards for her work as an individual academic and as part of a clinic legal education team. Tania was appointed Dean of Flinders Law in 2017.
Hossein Esmaeili
Associate Professor
LLB (UT); MA (TMU); LLM (UNSW); PhD (UNSW)
For Hossein, the law is a vital mix of passion, innovation, change and adaptation. His work is inspired by academic freedom and the ability to influence and change law and policy, both locally and internationally. “As a law academic, I address unanswered questions in my legal scholarship, engage with students and broader sections of society,” he explains. “It’s a lifelong journey of learning and growing.”
Hossein teaches real property law, trusts, law of the sea, energy and environmental security and international law. He joined the department in 2005, after seven years teaching at UNSW, the University of New England, and Western Sydney University.
His current research interests include Australian perspectives on international and comparative law particularly with regards to global energy, resources and the environment as well as Islamic and Middle Eastern law.
Hossein has authored, co-authored, and edited five scholarly books, including The Legal Regime of Offshore Oil Rigs in International Law (Ashgate Publisher, 2001) and The Boundaries of Australian Property Law (Cambridge University Press, 2016). He has published in leading international law journals worldwide. He has been a Co-Rapporteur of a committee of the International Law Association (since 2011) and serves on the editorial boards of a number of law journals in Australia, Asia and Europe.
Margaret Davies
Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor
Fellow, Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, Australian Academy of Law
BA Hons, LLB Hons (Adel); MA (Critical Theory, Sussex); DPhil (Legal and Critical Theory, Sussex)
Margaret’s interest in how the law articulates ideas of social justice in a practical context drew her to a legal teaching career. “I’m interested in the way those ideas develop over time,” she explains. “Law is a key focal point for expressing our collective values and promoting social justice – it has a strong historical basis but is also critical to orderly social change.”
She completed a doctorate in critical legal theory at Sussex University and became a Flinders University Law School foundation staff member in 1992. Since then she has been a visiting scholar at Birkbeck College, Umea University, UBC, University of Kent, Victoria University of Wellington and was Leverhulme Visiting Professorship at Kent University. She was a member of the ARC College of Experts’ Humanities and Creative Arts Panel from 2010 – 2012 (Chair, 2011) and serves on advisory boards for Social and Legal Studies, Feminist Legal Studies, and the Macquarie Law Journal.
Margaret's current research interests include how Western philosophy's founding assumptions dividing human society from its broader context – environment, technology, property, etc. – continue to shape legal concepts today. Her work contributes to meaningful conversations about how law and property can adapt to better reflect our future needs.
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