University of New England UNE

Bachelor of Economics/Bachelor of Laws

University of New England UNE

Type of institution: University/Higher Education Institution
Level: Undergraduate
CRICOS: 00003G

With economics and law influencing almost every aspect of society, the UNE Bachelor of Economics/Bachelor of Laws will equip you with a valuable portfolio of knowledge and skills relevant to a wide range of careers. You will graduate with knowledge and skills in the most recent theory and practice of law and an in-depth practical understanding of how the economy works, as well as transferable critical thinking, problem solving and analysis skills to apply to many industries. Study online in a timeframe that suits your lifestyle and get job-ready practical skills to future proof your career.

Structure

240 credit points

Subjects

  • Introductory Microeconomics (ECON101)
  • Introductory Macroeconomics (ECON102)
  • Intermediate Microeconomics (ECON201)
  • Intermediate Macroeconomics (ECON202)
  • Business Statistics (QM161)
  • Introduction to Business Analytics (QM162)
  • Australian Economic Institutions and Performance (ECON143)
  • Quantitative Skills with Applications (MTHS110)
  • Foundations of Law (LAW100)
  • Law in Context (LAW101)
  • Legal Professional Skills (LAW102)
  • Torts Law (LAW131)
  • Criminal Law (LAW162)
  • Contract Law (LAW172)
  • Property Law (LAW283)
  • Civil Dispute Resolution (LAW310)
  • Evidence and Proof (LAW313)
  • Professional Conduct (LAW320)
  • Equity and Trusts (LAW340)
  • Corporations Law (LAW351)
  • Constitutional Law (LAW399)
  • Administrative Law (LAW400)
  • Remedies and Advanced Legal Skills (LAW480)
  • Technology and the Law (LAW499)

Standard entry requirements

 an Australian Year 12 qualification or overseas equivalent.

Study information

CampusFeesEntryMid year intakeAttendance
Online Campus International: $155,520
  • ATAR: 84.4
No
  • Part-time : 12 years
  • Online/Off-campus : 5 years
UNE Armidale (main campus) International: $155,520
  • ATAR: 84.4
No
  • Full-time : 5 years
  • Part-time : 12 years

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