University of Surrey - Guildford
Registry
  
 

  
 
Registry > Provisional Module Catalogue - UNDER CONSTRUCTION & SUBJECT TO CHANGE
View Module List by A.O.U. and Level  Alphabetical Module Code List  Alphabetical Module Title List  Alphabetical Old Short Name List  View Menu 
2011/2 Provisional Module Catalogue - UNDER CONSTRUCTION & SUBJECT TO CHANGE
 Module Code: LAWM010 Module Title: DISSERTATION
Module Provider: School of Law Short Name: LAWM010
Level: M Module Co-ordinator: JAGO R Mr (Schl of Law)
Number of credits: 60 Number of ECTS credits: 30
 
Module Availability

2nd Semester

 

 

Assessment Pattern

Unit(s) of Assessment

 

 

Weighting towards Module Mark (%)

 

Coursework

 

 

100%

 

 

Module Overview

A 15,000 word extended piece of work in a subject area approved by the Director of Studies.

 

 

Prerequisites/Co-requisites

Students must ensure that if they intend to be awarded a specialist LLM in either International Law, European Law or Justice then they must ensure their topic broadly fits with the specialism.

 

 

Module Aims

The dissertation is an extended piece of writing (no more than 15,000 words), which allows the student to work on a topic independently in depth with appropriate guidance from a supervisor.  It enables students to specialise in an aspect of the taught programme which is of particular interest and to synthesise the skills and knowledge which they have acquired.

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Knowledge and understanding

 

 

·             Critical awareness of contemporary debates in the study of one or more particular areas of law

 

 

·             In-depth understanding of relevant theoretical perspectives

 

 

·             Understanding of processes of knowledge creation and contestation within law and more specifically European or International law or aspects of Justice

 

 

·             Understanding of techniques of research and enquiry and their application to the study of law

 

 

 

 

Cognitive skills

 

 

·             Gather, organise and deploy evidence and information from a range of different sources

 

 

·             Analyse and synthesise a wide range of material in verbal and numerical formats

 

 

·             Deal with complex issues systematically and creatively

 

 

·             Make sound judgements on basis of incomplete evidence

 

 

·             Demonstrate self-direction and originality in solving problems and analysing evidence

 

 

·             Construct reasoned argument

 

 

·             Apply theoretical frameworks to empirical analysis

 

 

 

 

Practical skills

 

 

·             Carry out an advanced literature search

 

 

·             Form effective arguments

 

 

·             Organise workload to meet deadlines

 

 

·             Formulate research questions

 

 

·             Present research findings in writing

 

 

 

 

Transferable Skills

 

 

·             Communicate and present ideas effectively

 

 

·             Reason critically

 

 

·             Organise and plan own work

 

 

·             Adopt a proactive approach to problem-solving

 

 

·             Deploy a range of relevant research skills

 

 

·             Make decisions in complex situations

 

 

·             Take responsibility for own learning

 

 

Module Content

The dissertation is a piece of research on a well-specified question relating to an academic area covered by the programme.  The work may be of an empirical or theoretical kind and must be written in English.  Students will have introductory research methods training in the form of extensive preparatory seminar.

 

 

Methods of Teaching/Learning

By individual consultation and discussion as well as independent research.  See also Dissertation Guidelines in the Programme Handbook for detailed guidance on scholarly conventions and procedures for writing the dissertation.

 

 

Selected Texts/Journals

Specific to individual topics but students are strongly advised to consult the reference recommended for other modules.

 

 

 

 

Also, see the following pages on the University of Surrey website:

 

 

“Preparing These and Dissertations”

 

 

“Citing References in a Bibliography”

 

 

Last Updated

10/02/2011