Module SXL-4109:
Legal Research Methods
Module Facts
Run by School of History, Law and Social Sciences
20.000 Credits or 10.000 ECTS Credits
Semester 2
Organiser: Mr Cathal MacPartholan
Overall aims and purpose
This practical module is designed to develop the necessary legal research skills to support study and research at LLM level. The emphasis will be on the knowledge and skills needed to draft a good quality Masters’ dissertation and research papers. Sessions include an overview and introduction to legal research methods; exploring the planning phase of your dissertation; examining the construction of a literature review and bibliography; training in traditional and empirical legal research methods; using appropriate legal English or Welsh throughout your dissertation, and crafting arguments and persuasive text that is adequately substantiated and referenced.
Course content
An indicative list of the topics the module will cover includes;
- using a Law Library,
- essay writing for Masters students,
- legal writing,
- identification and evaluation of sources,
- avoiding plagiarism, referencing correctly, compiling a bibliography,
- planning a dissertation project,
- writing a research proposal,
- identifying a dissertation research question,
- research methodologies,
- doing a literature review.
Assessment Criteria
C- to C+
C- to C+ (50-59%) An answer which, while always in the main accurate and correct, fails to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant material and is lacking in criticism. An answer which while reliable with regard to correctness is either not comprehensive or not entirely pertinent.
good
Good: B- to B+ (60-69%) High Standard: A comprehensive answer, containing all the material relevant to the question and no irrelevancy, all the material and references being accurate and correct, there being no inaccuracy or error, the whole presented in an argument which, while clear, logical and critical, leaves room for improvement in its construction and presentation. An answer which shows complete competence in the subject.
excellent
A- to A* (70%+) Present highly competent work, display a critical awareness of empirical, theoretical and methodological issues as to topic, should put forward coherent arguments, and demonstrate awareness of contemporary debates with relevant literature. Well organised and thorough bibliographic information.
Learning outcomes
-
Identify, and reflect critically upon the problems associated with legal research and develop appropriate analytical skills for their relevant LLM programme.
-
Show a comprehensive understanding of the skills necessary to write an appropriate research project proposal, including adopting the appropriate research methodology and writing a literature review.
-
Develop a critical understanding of the basic principles of research design and strategy, including formulating researchable questions, enabling students to make appropriate choices for their own research.
-
Show mastery of the skills required to undertake legal research at the postgraduate level, including the ability to search for sources, critically appraise those sources, and reference those sources accurately.
-
Show mastery of the skills necessary to effectively submit a dissertation, a research proposal and other forms of legal writing appropriate to postgraduate level by displaying the ability to effectively use legal Welsh and/or English to communicate complex ideas, references sources correctly, and comply with any necessary submission requirements.
Assessment Methods
Type | Name | Description | Weight |
---|---|---|---|
Online Multiple Choice Exam | 33.34 | ||
Research Proposal | 66.66 |
Teaching and Learning Strategy
Hours | ||
---|---|---|
Private study | Students are required to undertake 178 hours of private study to prepare for seminars, assessments, and to develop their research proposal. |
178 |
Seminar | The module will consist of 11 x 2 hour teaching blocks. The instructor will contextualise the teaching in discussions using examples based on the exercises. Students will be expected to be able to engage in dialogue about substantive issues for each class, and be actively engaged in activities such as small group exercises that will enhance their understanding. |
22 |
Transferable skills
- Literacy - Proficiency in reading and writing through a variety of media
- Computer Literacy - Proficiency in using a varied range of computer software
- Self-Management - Able to work unsupervised in an efficient, punctual and structured manner. To examine the outcomes of tasks and events, and judge levels of quality and importance
- Exploring - Able to investigate, research and consider alternatives
- Information retrieval - Able to access different and multiple sources of information
- Inter-personal - Able to question, actively listen, examine given answers and interact sensitevely with others
- Critical analysis & Problem Solving - Able to deconstruct and analyse problems or complex situations. To find solutions to problems through analyses and exploration of all possibilities using appropriate methods, rescources and creativity.
- Presentation - Able to clearly present information and explanations to an audience. Through the written or oral mode of communication accurately and concisely.
- Argument - Able to put forward, debate and justify an opinion or a course of action, with an individual or in a wider group setting
- Self-awareness & Reflectivity - Having an awareness of your own strengths, weaknesses, aims and objectives. Able to regularly review, evaluate and reflect upon the performance of yourself and others
Subject specific skills
- demonstrate the ability to work with others in a team to achieve reasoned, critical, comparative perspectives upon legal questions.
- present reasoned, critical, comparative responses to the views of others on legal subjects within a Welsh, United Kingdom, European and/or global context;
- present to others from a specialist or non-specialist background, reasoned, critical, comparative presentations relating to legal subjects within a Welsh, United Kingdom, European and/or global context;
- write sustained critical expositions of any given area of the legal subjects studied and present the findings clearly, logically and coherently;
Resources
Talis Reading list
http://readinglists.bangor.ac.uk/modules/sxl-4109.htmlReading list
• Steve Foster, How to Write Better Law Essays (4th edn Pearson 2016)
• Emily Finch and Stefan Fafinski, Legal Skills (7th edn Oxford University Press 2019)
• J Holland and J Webb, Learning Legal Rules (10th edn Oxford University Press 2019)
• ATH Smith, Glanville Williams: Learning the Law (16th edn Sweet and Maxwell 2016)
• Rupert Haigh, Legal English (4th edn Routledge 2015)
• Michael Salter and Julie Mason, Writing Law Dissertations : An Introduction and Guide to the Conduct of Legal Research (2nd edn Pearson 2012).
• Mike McConville and Wing Hong Chui, Research Methods for Law (2nd Edinburgh University Press 2016).
• Martin Davies, Study Skills for International Postgraduates (Palgrave 2011).
• David Madsen, Successful Dissertations and Theses: A Guide to Graduate Student Research from Proposal to Completion (2nd edn Jossey-Bass 2013).
Pre- and Co-requisite Modules
Pre-requisite of:
Courses including this module
Compulsory in courses:
- M1AF: LLM International Commercial and Business Law year 1 (LLM/ICBL)
- M1AT: LLM International Criminal Law & Intl Human Rights Law year 1 (LLM/ICLHR)
- M1AO: LLM International Intellectual Property Law year 1 (LLM/IIPL)
- M1AI: LLM International Law year 1 (LLM/IL)
- M1AC: LLM Laws year 1 (LLM/LAW)
- M1AM: LLM Law and Criminology year 1 (LLM/LC)
- M1AR: LLM Maritime Law year 1 (LLM/MLAW)
- M1AQ: LLM Public Procurement Law and Strategy year 1 (LLM/PPLS)