Program

Fine Arts / Law - 4704

Program Summary

Faculty: Faculty of Law

Contact: http://www.law.unsw.edu.au/

Campus: Sydney

Career: Undergraduate

Typical Duration: 5 Years

Typical UOC Per Semester: 24

Min UOC Per Semester: 6

Max UOC Per Semester: 27

Min UOC For Award: 240

UAC Code: 426000

ATAR: 99.65  

International Entry Requirements: See International Entry Requirements

Information valid for students commencing 2013.
Students who commenced prior to 2013 should go to the Handbook's Previous Editions

Program Description

The Bachelor of Law / Bachelor of Fine Arts (LLB BFA) is a 5 year dual award program which combines a highly valued legal qualification with a qualification designed for those who may wish to involve themselves as practitioners in the visual arts or related fields.

The LLB component provides students with the fundamentals of law and the opportunity to complete a professional legal degree. The BFA component offers students strong fundamentals combined with flexibility to explore various media through practice and experimentation.

Program Objectives and Graduate Attributes

The UNSW School of Law instills in students the understandings, values, skills and qualities necessary to become highly qualified professionals with a strong sense of citizenship, community and social justice. A legal education at the UNSW Law School, therefore, develops graduates who have:
  1. a functioning and contextual knowledge of law and legal institutions;
  2. excellent intellectual skills of analysis, synthesis, critical judgment, reflection and evaluation;
  3. the capacity to engage in practical and scholarly research;
  4. effective oral and written communication skills both generally and in specific legal settings;
  5. a commitment to personal and professional self-development, ethical practice and social responsibility.
The BFA component aims to:
  1. Provide an opportunity for students to undertake rigorous and demanding studies at tertiary level from a wide range of approaches and disciplines within the visual arts.
  2. Provide the opportunity for students to explore the visual arts through a critical examination of the possibilities they offer and by use of available technological resources.
  3. Encourage students to develop increased self-motivation as developing independent and professional practitioners.
  4. Encourage students to realise their own intellectual and creative potential.
  5. Increase students' awareness of, and sensitivity to, their environment.
  6. Provide students with:
  • an understanding of concepts relevant to aesthetics and the visual arts;
  • an understanding of various media through practice and experimentation with such media;
  • an understanding of research practice in fine arts, and a capacity to engage with research;
  • a confidence and competence in decision making, together with an appreciative and informed awareness of viewpoints in the visual arts other than their own; and
  • an understanding of the historical and theoretical underpinning of contemporary fine art practice.

Program Structure

The Bachelor of Law Bachelor of Fine Arts consists of 144 UOC of Law courses and 96 UOC of Fine Arts courses as detailed in the following table:
 
LLB component
 144 UOC
  • Compulsory courses (96UOC)
  • Prescribed elective (6UOC)
  • Law Electives (42UOC)
BFA
component
 96 UOC
  • Fine Arts major
  • 24 OUC in Fine Arts streams
  • 24 UOC in Fine Arts, Design or Media Streams

Approved Sequence of Study
The Plan for the dual Fine Arts/LLB program provides a standard outline of the sequence of law courses in Years 1-5.

Plan for Fine Arts/LLB 4704

Free Law Electives
All Free Electives must be taken from an approved list of LAWS courses. Approximately 25-30 electives are made available each session. The number of students that may take an elective may be limited.

Fine Arts Streams (48 UOC)
Students must complete:
  • 24 UOC from approved Fine Arts streams
  • 24 UOC from approved Fine Arts, Design or Media Arts streams
Fine Art Streams:
Painting, Drawing, Sculpture Installation Performance, Printmaking, Photography, Textiles, Cross-Media Art

Design Streams:
Graphics Media, Object Design, Spatial Design, Textiles, Jewellery, Ceramics

Media Art Streams:
Animation and Visual Effects, Video Sound Image, Cross-Media Arts
Please note that these requirements may be subject to change. Students should always follow the program requirements according to the year they started their degree.

General Education Requirements

Students enrolled in dual law degrees (with exception to Jurisprudence/Law) are not required to complete general education courses.

Honours

Honours in BFA Component
Students undertaking the BFA in Dual Award mode may apply to complete an
additional year (48UOC) of study for the award of Honours. For details of Honours please see 4814 Bachelor of Fine Arts (Advanced).

Honours in LLB Component
The Bachelor of Laws (LLB) will be awarded with the following levels of Honours:

Honours Class 1
Honours Class 2, Division 1
Honours Class 2, Division 2

To be awarded Honours in Law, students are not required to complete an additional year. Honours in Law is based on academic excellence throughout the degree. There are three criteria relevant for awarding Honours:

Honours Weighted Average Mark (WAM)
Honours WAM will be calculated using the WAM from core courses as 60 percent of the Honours WAM and the WAM from the prescribed elective courses as 40 percent of Honours WAM.

Satisfactory performance in written research
To demonstrate satisfactory performance in written research, a student must complete one long substantial piece (i.e. research thesis) or three shorter substantial pieces of research (i.e. 3000 words or more) in their program that is awarded a credit or more.

Not been found guilty of plagiarism or serious misconduct on more than one occasion and not more than one failure in the law program

For more information, please visit the Honours Page on the Law website.

Academic Rules

For Academic Rules relating to the Bachelor of Fine Arts

For the BFA component of this degree, please refer to Program 4800.

For Academic Rules relating to the Bachelor of Laws

For Academic Rules relating to the Bachelor of Laws component of this combined degree program, please refer to program 4701. Although 4701 program is no longer on offer, all combined law students enrolled in the LLB will need to comply with the rules stated here.

A direct link is given below:

Bachelor of Laws 4701

Fees

For information regarding fees for UNSW programs, please refer to the following website:  https://my.unsw.edu.au/student/fees/FeesMainPage.html

Important Information

The Academic Rules for the BFA/LLB and the online enrolment facility provide students
with a wide range of course choices. The online enrolment facility checks that
students meet the enrolment requirements for individual courses but not that a
course complies with Program Rules. Students are responsible for ensuring they are
enrolling in accordance with the Academic Rules outlined above. Students should
not assume that because they have enrolled in a course online that the course is automatically credited to their dual degree program.

Professional Recognition

For further information, please refer to the Professional Recognition of Programs in the UNSW Online Handbook.

Contact

Contact Faculty of Law Student Services for advice on the LLB component.

Tel: +61 (2) 9385 2264
Location: 2nd Floor, Law Building, Kensington Campus


Contact the College of Fine Arts (COFA) for advice on the BFA component.

Tel: +61 (2) 9385 0684
Location: Ground Floor, D Block, Paddington Campus

Area(s) of Specialisation