UCL Faculty of Laws


The UCL Faculty of Laws is the law school of University College London, a member institution of the federal University of London. It is one of UCL's 11 constituent faculties and is based in London, United Kingdom.
With a history dating back to 1827, the faculty was the first law school in England to admit students regardless of their religion, the first to admit women on equal terms with men, the first to award a law degree to a woman, Eliza Orme, and appointed one of the first three female law professors in the UK, Valentine Korah, who pioneered the study of competition law in Europe.
The faculty in 2022-23 reported a student body comprising 825 enrolled undergraduates, 450 taught full and part time post-graduates and around 50 research students, and offers a variety of undergraduate and graduate degrees. It publishes a number of journals, including Current Legal Problems and the UCL Journal of Law and Jurisprudence. It is the only university in the UK to hold a legal aid contract, which forms part of its Integrated Legal Advice Clinic.

History

The faculty traces its roots to the appointment of the noted legal philosopher, John Austin, as Professor of Jurisprudence in 1827. Andrew Amos, a successful barrister, became the first Professor of English Law. However, numbers fell off after the Law Society and the Inner Temple began offering lectures in law in 1833, leading both professors to resign. Alexander Murison was professor of Roman Law from 1884 to 1925, still paid "five shillings in the guinea" from the student fees; his successor, Herbert Felix Jolowicz, was guaranteed an income of £800 a year. The royal commission of 1898 that led to the reformation of the University of London as a federal institution found that the law classes at UCL were not well attended and, with the Inns of Court having declined to join the federal university, concluded that the teaching in UCL and King's College was insufficient to allow a faculty of laws to be formed. However, an intercollegiate faculty of laws was established in 1906, bringing together UCL, King's and the LSE.
The UCL Faculty of Laws expanded rapidly in the 1960s and soon outgrew its office space. The Faculty of Laws building, later named Bentham House, was bought by the college in 1965. Expanding beyond its traditional strengths of Roman law and jurisprudence, the faculty appointed the UK's first Professor of Air and Space Law in 1967 and offered courses in Russian and Soviet Law. In the mid-2000s, the faculty expanded into the adjacent 1970s building in Endsleigh Street, now the Gideon Schreier Wing.
Previous deans of the faculty include George Williams Keeton, Bin Cheng, Bob Hepple, Jeffrey Jowell, Dawn Oliver, and Dame Hazel Genn. Eloise Scotford has been dean since 2022.

Building

The faculty is based at Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens, a Grade II listed building a few minutes walk from the main UCL campus. The building is named after philosopher, jurist and reformer Jeremy Bentham, who is closely associated with UCL, and whose collected works are published by the faculty as part of the Bentham Project. The main building was originally constructed in 1954–8 as a headquarters for the National Union of General and Municipal Workers: the exterior decoration includes at fifth-floor level five relief sculptures of industrial workers by Esmond Burton.
Facilities at Bentham House include teaching rooms, lecture halls, a courtroom for moots, a student lounge, a coffee bar and two computer cluster rooms.
In the mid-2010s, Bentham House was redeveloped for £18.5m by architects Levitt Bernstein, a project which was completed in 2018.

Academics

Research

The faculty was placed first in the UK for the quality of its research in the 2021 Research Excellence Framework. The faculty's Judicial Institute, launched in 2010, was the first specialist academic centre for research and teaching about the judiciary to be established in the UK. UCL Laws is home to a number of associated research centres, groups and institutes:
  • Bentham Project
  • Centre for Access to Justice
  • Centre for Commercial Law
  • Centre for Criminal Law
  • Centre for Empirical Legal Studies
  • Centre for Ethics & Law
  • Centre for International Courts & Tribunals
  • Centre for Law, Economics and Society
  • Centre for Law and the Environment
  • Centre for Law and Governance in Europe
  • Institute of Brand and Innovation Law
  • Institute of Global Law
  • Institute of Human Rights
  • Jevons Institute for Competition Law and Economics
  • Judicial Institute
  • Labour Rights Institute
  • UCL Jurisprudence Group
  • UCL Private Law Group
  • Human Rights Beyond Borders

    Teaching

Undergraduate

The faculty reported in 2010 that it receives around 2,500 applications for approximately 140 undergraduate places each year. The minimum entry requirements are A*AA grades at A-level, and a high LNAT score. All candidates to whom an offer is contemplated being made who are identified as requiring particular consideration are interviewed. There are no places available through the UCAS clearing process.

Graduate

The faculty admits approximately 350 students to its on campus LLM course each year, receiving an average of 2,500 applicants for admission.
The minimum entry requirements for the MPhil and PhD research degrees are a bachelor's degree with first or high upper second honours together with an LLM with an average grade of 65%.
Education policies
UCL Laws has been vocal about the impact of AI on education, particularly in regard to its impact on the learning process.

Publications

The faculty publishes a number of journals, including Current Legal Problems, first published in 1948, and the student journal, UCL Journal of Law and Jurisprudence.

Public lectures

The faculty hosts a number of free public lectures each week on a wide range of legal topics. These lectures are delivered by eminent academics from major universities around the world, senior members of the judiciary and leading legal practitioners.

Reputation and rankings

The faculty was ranked second in the UK for law in The Guardian University Guide 2025, first in the Times Good University Guide 2025, second in the Complete University Guide 2025, 12th globally in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2024 by subject: law, and 14th globally in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2024: Law & Legal Studies. In analysis of the 2021 Research Excellence Framework results by Times Higher Education, the Faculty of Laws was ranked first in the United Kingdom for the quality of its research.

Notable academic staff

The Faculty has a large number of academic staff active in research across legal domains, as well as many notable previous staff. These include:

Current Academic Staff

NameTitle
Dame Hazel Genn KCProfessor of Socio-Legal Studies
Sir Robin JacobSir Hugh Laddie Professor of Intellectual Property
Sir Jonathan MontgomeryProfessor of Health Care Law
Eloise ScotfordProfessor of Environmental Law
Philippe Sands KCProfessor of the Public Understanding of Law
Anthony JuliusChair of Law and the Arts
Lawrence Collins, Baron Collins of MapesburyProfessor of Law
George LetsasProfessor of the Philosophy of Law
Charles MitchellProfessor of Laws
Paul S. DaviesProfessor of Commercial Law
David Ormerod KC Professor of Criminal Law
Michael VealeProfessor of Technology Law and Policy
Ralph WildeProfessor of Public International Law
Orla LynskeyChair of Law and Technology

Emeritus and Former Academic Staff

NameTitle
Eric BarendtEmeritus Professor of Media Law
Wiliam TwiningQuain Professor of Jurisprudence Emeritus
Stephen GuestEmeritus Professor of Legal Philosophy, Principal Research Associate
Bin ChengProfessor of Air and Space Law, Dean of the Faculty
Valentine KorahEmeritus Professor of Competition Law
Ian DennisEmeritus Professor of English Law
Ian KennedyEmeritus Professor of Health Law, Ethics and Policy
Ronald DworkinBentham Professor of Jurisprudence
Sir Malcolm GrantProfessor of Law
Sir Hugh LaddieProfessor of Intellectual Property Law
Basil Markesinis KCEmeritus Professor of Common and Civil Law
George Williams KeetonProfessor of English Law

Honorary and Visiting Staff

NameTitle
Baroness Hale of Richmond DBEHonorary Professor of Law; former President of the Supreme Court
Scott ShapiroVisiting Quain Professor of Law, UCL
Richard MoorheadHonorary Professor; formerly Professor of Legal Ethics
Robert Carnwath, Lord Carnwath of Notting HillHonorary Professor of Law
John Hendy, Baron HendyHonorary Professor of Labour Law

Notable alumni

Judiciary