Professional Legal Practice Postgraduate Diploma
| Program start date | Application deadline |
| 2024-09-01 | - |
Program Overview
Course summary
The Professional Legal Practice Postgraduate Diploma is designed as a conversion course for non-law graduates who are seeking to transition to a career in law. You’ll learn both the law and its practical application to realistic client-based and ethical problems and situations. The course will provide you with a solid foundation to qualify either as a solicitor or a barrister, whichever profession you decide upon.
The knowledge gained on this course will allow you to progress to further study for the Solicitors’ Qualifying Examination (SQE) or for a Bar Standards Board authorised barristers’ training course. You will learn the essential foundation areas of legal knowledge needed for a career in law.
You’ll be able to develop key, relevant skills in your tutorials, looking at writing, drafting, interviewing and advising, research, case and matter analysis and advocacy. You’ll be assessed by a variety of authentic assessments which include advocacy, a case study report and analysis of a legal case. These will provide you with an opportunity to demonstrate that you have acquired competence in a range of essential professional legal skills in addition to understanding the substantive law.
Top reasons to study with us
- Small, interactive group sessions allow you to benefit from individual guidance and help. These sessions mimic a live legal workplace, providing you with an opportunity to put your knowledge of theory into practice
- The opportunity to undertake real client legal work under the supervision of tutors working in the Student Law Centre. The focus is on experiential learning through reflection, analysis and planning
- Highly experienced and approachable lecturers, many of whom are qualified solicitors or barristers
- The course is taught at Westminster Law School in the heart of London's West End, with many law firms nearby
Course structure
To be awarded the Postgraduate Diploma in Professional Legal Practice, you’ll study six core modules, honing your knowledge and skills in interactive group sessions.
The following modules are indicative of what you will study on this course.
Core modules
Criminal Liability and Procedure
This module will introduce you to the core legal principles underlying criminal liability, by examining the way they shape criminal law (including actus reus and mens rea, and the definition of offences and defences), as well as key rules of procedure in the lead up to and during a criminal trial.
Legal Systems and Public Law
This module looks at the structures of the legal system, the court hierarchy, precedent and statutory interpretation. It considers the regulation of legal services and the regulatory role of the Solicitors Regulatory Authority including the application of the Equality Act 2010, money laundering legislation such as the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 and the regulation of financial services and legislation such as the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. It also considers the funding options for legal services such as conditional fee arrangements and eligibility for legal aid. The module considers the structure and principle characteristics of the constitution of the UK and analyses the unique structure of the UK constitution and its impact on the exercise of governmental power and the protection of human rights. It considers the principles of administrative law and the judicial review process by which public authorities are legally accountable.
Obligations in Context
This module will introduce students to modern English contract and tort law as part of the wider law of obligations. You will explore the legal and theoretical issues that form the core of contract law and the core ideas, concepts and principles which underpin the law of tort. The module will draw out understanding of these core principles and the ability to apply them to legal problems. The module will consider the practical context in which contract and tort law operate and how disputes in relation to them may be resolved.
Company Law and Business Practice
The module explores the concept of legal personality as applied to companies registered under the Companies Act 2006, in contrast to other business vehicles. The rules relating to companies are analysed from legal, practical, historical, economic, sociological and political perspectives. Constitutional matters and the concept of limited liability are explored. You will consider what happens behind the corporate veil, looking at the rights and duties of shareholders and directors and the management of decision making. From a financial perspective, the module considers the ways in which a company raises finance, the principles of taxation and the rules of corporate and personal insolvency. You will also develop an insight and understanding of typical business transactions and commercial contracts.
Equity, Trusts and Wills
This module provides an opportunity to consider the role of equity and trusts in relation to family and commercial trusts. The module will also identify the substantive law in key areas including express trusts, purpose (public and private) trusts, trusts which arise by operation of law, the nature of trustees’ duties, the nature of fiduciary obligations, liability of third parties and consider their application to solve factual problems. The module will address the ways in which equity may intervene to mitigate the common law and the significance of equitable remedies for individuals in the context of the infringement of civil law rights and the protection of human rights. The law and practice of wills and the administration of estates will also be considered.
Land Law
This module will introduce you to the principles and concepts of modern English (and Welsh) land (and property) law. You will explore the legal framework of registered and unregistered land, the estates and interest in land (distinguishing between law and equity), the rights and obligations of the landlord and tenant, the landlord and tenant statutory framework, the law relating to mortgages, the creation and protection of easements and freehold covenants, the distinction between leases and licences, an overview of leasehold covenants, the devolution of estates and interests in express co-ownership and the creation of a constructive trust and quantification of land in implied co-ownership. The module will also consider the process of residential and commercial conveyancing.
