The information provided in this section is an introduction to the full range of information that is available, and is not intended to be complete. Students are advised to visit the Faculty of Law and UTS websites for more comprehensive information.
The Faculty is located at City campus, Haymarket. Most academic and administrative staff are located in Building 5, City campus, Haymarket, although some staff are located at City campus, Mary Ann House and at the Kuring-gai campus, Lindfield.
Detailed directions can be found at:
UTS Student Centres provide information and assistance to students and the general public, and are the first point of call for all student and course related inquiries, including course progression, information and advice, and interpretation of University rules and regulations.
The Faculty of Law Executive is led by the Dean and is supported by two Associate Deans (Teaching and Learning, and Research), and the Faculty Manager.
The Faculty of Law is governed by the Faculty Board in Law which consists of ex officio members, nominated members, elected staff members and elected student members. The Faculty Board in Law meets quarterly and is the formal decision-making body of the Faculty. A number of Faculty committees report to the Faculty Board in Law.
In 2007, a new Law Executive Council was formed comprising Faculty management and representatives from the legal profession, government and the community. The Law Executive Council is responsible for ensuring that the academic standard of the Faculty is maintained, and has the task of scrutinising all new programs and proposed initiatives as well as offering strategic advice and an external focus for the Faculty.
Students will be permitted to enrol in subjects totalling a maximum of 28 credit points per semester with the leave of the Director, Students, if:
The Faculty of Law cannot guarantee avoidance of timetable and/or examination clashes where students do not follow the standard course progression.
The current timetable is available at:
Law classes for full-time studies are generally timetabled during the day. Registrations in evening or other classes are subject to availability, and the Faculty of Law does not provide any guarantees in securing preferences.
For study load and class attendance details, see Course duration and attendance in the General information section.
Essays and other written work should be prepared in accordance with the guidelines laid down in the Faculty of Law's Guide to Essay Writing. Further details and the required assignment coversheet is available at
All work submitted for assessment should bear a UTS:Law assignment coversheet.
If required by the lecturer concerned the work must be typed. It must also be properly written with due regard to spelling, punctuation, grammar and syntax.
Unless otherwise instructed by the lecturer concerned, all written work should include footnotes or endnotes and a bibliography in the manner set out in the Guide to Essay Writing.
Any piece of written work which does not comply with these requirements may be:
Students are required to retain a copy of all assignments submitted. Students who are handing in written work must submit it, with an assignment coversheet attached, in the assignment box located adjacent to the Law Reception on level 3 of the Law faculty. The assignment box is cleared daily at 6pm. Assignments submitted by facsimile or email will not be accepted by the Faculty, unless otherwise arranged with the lecturer.
Any work submitted after the date of submission may be penalised in marks or rejected without assessment (where circumstances dictate).
Subject coordinators have the right to establish individual assessment regimes. University Rules provide for an appeal against assessment results if students are not told of changes to assessment by week two of semester (although in some circumstances revision can be made during semester).
Subject to any contrary instruction in the subject outline, if students submit their assignments after the due date without an extension they may be penalised up to 5 per cent of the total marks available for that assessment task per working day. Any assignment submitted after 10 working days from the due date may be given a mark of 0 per cent unless otherwise arranged. Lecturers may refuse to accept work once the assessment piece has been returned to other students, subject to reasonable excuse and permission given beforehand.
Where individual work is required for the purposes of assessment, the copying, unacknowledged use of, or reliance on the work of other individuals without acknowledgment is considered to be cheating/misconduct. The penalties imposed for cheating/misconduct or allowing work to be plagiarised are severe under the University Rules and regulations.
Plagiarism is one of the most serious crimes in the academic community. It indicates an attempt by someone to pass off the words and/or ideas of another as their own. To take any but a few sequential words of another without acknowledgment is plagiarism and tantamount to cheating. It will be so treated at the Faculty of Law.
Experience shows that one of the most common ways for plagiarism to occur is when students work together. It is acknowledged by the academic staff that study groups are an efficient and beneficial method of learning but problems arise when it is extended into the assessment process. The Faculty expects, in fact demands, that all assignments submitted be the work of the person who is credited with the mark. It can be an extremely fine line between discussion of an essay topic with another, and collaboration, but where comparisons of various students' work indicate collaboration this will be taken to be plagiarism and the Faculty policy will be invoked (see the Guide to Essay Writing).
Any acts of plagiarism will be penalised. Such penalties may include, depending upon the seriousness and nature of the offence:
The library aims to support the teaching, learning and research needs of the students and staff in the Faculty of Law. The law collection consists of print and electronic sources while training and research assistance can be provided. Further details about the UTS Library can be found at:
The Faculty provides three computer labs for use by Faculty of Law students. Students have access to the full range of Microsoft Office applications, the internet and printers, and are supported by a Faculty-based ITD team.
Monday – Friday, 8.00 am – 10.00 pm and Saturday, 9.00 am – 5.00 pm during semester.
In addition, the UTS Information Technology Division provides computer laboratories for UTS students on all campuses. For further information see:
The UTS Law Students' Society (LSS) is the largest student run society on campus. It provides a variety of services to its members ranging from organising social events, running legal competitions, providing careers information and representing the educational concerns of law students. An important part of this role involves being a key communication channel between the law faculty and the student body including representing student concerns to the Dean where necessary.
The LSS communicates its activities and relevant activities of the Law faculty to students via a free fortnightly e-newsletter, The Buzz, which students and staff can subscribe to at:
The Law Students' Society is governed by a Council of student members, elected at the Society's Annual General Meeting held in October each year. The Council meets on a monthly basis during each semester to review the Society's activities and discuss new initiatives. Interest and input are encouraged from students; many of the ideas acted upon come from members.
Social functions are an important part of university life and the Society regularly organises functions for students. Popular events include the annual Graduation Ball and a variety of 'drinks nights' throughout each semester, as well as a harbour cruise and many on-campus barbecues. The Society can also assist in organising functions that students wish to hold.
Services to members include:
The Society is responsible for the publication of Full Bench magazine. This provides an outlet for the Council to communicate with its members. Also, members may submit articles of interest, whether social, academic or education-based. These will be reviewed for inclusion by the Council. A list of Council members is posted on the Law Students' Society notice board, located outside the Society's office.
The Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII) provides free access to Australian legal material online; making it one of the world's largest publicly-accessible databases of legal materials on the internet. AustLII aims to make available all public legal information: primary legal materials (legislation and decisions of courts and tribunals), and secondary materials that are (or ought to be) in the public domain or able to be licensed free of charge. AustLII's public policy agenda is to convince governments, courts, law reform bodies and other publicly-funded organisations to make legal materials they control available for free via the internet. It has an innovative approach to computerising legal materials, based on over 10 years' research and development.
AustLII's research features include automated rich hypertext, development and use of its own search engine (SINO), and integration of hypertext and text retrieval.
AustLII is jointly operated by the Faculties of Law at UTS and the University of New South Wales. It was established by funding from the Department of Education, Employment and Training, and the two host universities, and also receives funding from the Australian Research Council, AusAID, Thomson Legal and Regulatory Ltd, the federal Attorney-General's Department, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Defence Legal, Courts and Tribunals, other bodies and the legal profession.
Admission to the Supreme Court of NSW to practise as a lawyer in NSW is based upon the successful completion of an accredited legal qualification (e.g. Bachelor of Laws) and an accredited course of Practical Legal Training (PLT).
The UTS PLT program is accredited by the Legal Profession Admission Board of the Supreme Court of NSW. UTS was the first university to offer an accredited PLT program in Sydney.
The program is comprised of six academic subjects (totalling 36 credit points) and a practical experience work placement, it can be undertaken within three courses at the UTS Faculty of Law, these are:
Note: Students who enrolled in the UTS Bachelor of Laws prior to 2008 may be required to concurrently enrol in the Graduate Certificate in Legal Practice (C11128) to enable completion of PLT requirements.
A compulsory and integral part of the PLT program is completion of a Practical Experience work placement. Students must undertake an approved 16 weeks of full-time, or equivalent part-time work placement. For further details regarding completion requirements students should refer to the Practical Experience Guidelines and Rules online at:
The Faculty of Law participates in the Graduate Employment Scheme and Summer Clerkship Program in conjunction with the major Sydney law firms and government departments.
The employment interview scheme was devised in 1980 and is available to penultimate and final-year law students who are interested in working in one of the large law firms or government organisations. Students who participate develop a greater understanding of employment opportunities and legal experience, whilst adding detail to their resumes.
The UTS Faculty of Law, in conjunction with the UTS Careers Service and UTS Law Students' Society, organise a range of support services for interested students within application timelines each year (April/May for the Graduate Employment Scheme; July/August for the Summer Clerkship Program).
Further details on support services, conditions of participation, and closing dates are available from the Faculty website at:
The Faculty of Law offers a range of cross-disciplinary law subjects – studies in various strands of the law for students not undertaking a law qualification, but who wish to become familiar with the law as it affects their chosen profession. Through its cross-disciplinary program, the Faculty of Law offers subjects for students in the faculties of Business; Engineering; Nursing, Midwifery and Health; Science; and Design, Architecture and Building.
Cross-disciplinary students enrol in Faculty of Law subjects through their home faculty and any inquiries should be made in the first instance at the Student Centre.
Further information is available from:
The following Law majors are available within the Master of Business Administration (C04018) taught by the Faculty of Business.
The following Law sub-majors are available within courses from other UTS faculties:
Some courses from other UTS faculties may also include Law subjects not listed under any of the above majors and sub-majors; students should check the Handbook entry for the course in which they are enrolled for further details, or contact the appropriate Student Centre.