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  1. UNSW Law & Justice is ranked 12th Law Faculty in the world* and has the highest-ranked criminology program in NSW**. Immerse yourself in the practical application of law and justice to tackle tomorrow’s big challenges. Sharpen your mind with complex ideas from a law faculty that’s driven by an ethos of justice for all.

  2. Law Clinics. UNSW Law & Justice offers law students the opportunity to undertake WIL through legal education in clinics, providing students with the chance to transform what they have learnt in the classroom into real-life practice under the guidance of experienced practitioners. View the Faculty of Law & Justice's clinics. Law Internships

  3. Melanie is Deputy Dean (Education) in the Faculty of Law and Justice. She teaches and convenes Criminal Laws, Advanced Criminal Law and teaches into the Indigenous programs in the Faculty, including the pre-law program and the winter school. She convenes the criminal justice stream in the Humanities Pathway Program.

  4. The SLEG modules have been developed by UNSW Law & Justice students in conjunction with members of the Law & Justice faculty and the Kingsford Legal Centre. These resources are updated each year and written with the NSW Education Standards Authority curricular specifically in mind, so they can be tailored to suit the needs of the classroom and syllabus.

  5. Here at UNSW Law & Justice, we have International Student Support Advisors who are academic members of staff and your first port of call for any academic issues or concerns. The Advisors also convene workshops throughout the year on a range of topics such as preparing for class, class participation and preparing for your assessments.

  6. Lyria is a Professor and Associate Dean (Research) in the Faculty of Law and Justice at UNSW Sydney. She is also co-lead of the Law and Policy theme in the Cyber Security Cooperative Research Centre, Faculty Lead, Law and Justice in the UNSW Institute for Cyber Security and co-chair of the Australian Law Associate Dean Research Network.

  7. Every year UNSW Law & Justice provides up to 100 places for students studying a non-law degree at UNSW to transfer into a Law double degree. Alternative entry through Internal Program Transfer (IPT) doesn’t require you to sit the LAT and providing you receive full credit for your first year of studies, it won’t take you any longer to complete a law double degree.