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You can take your studies further and open up a vast choice of job opportunities by studying a combined law and engineering science degree.
This course combines the technical demands of engineering with the theoretical and analytical foundations involved in studying law, preparing students to develop fundamental legal expertise that is underpinned by technical knowledge.
The Bachelor of Engineering Science is an engineering technology program. Students work alongside professional engineers to gain skills in areas such as mathematical modelling, engineering economics and finance, C programming and electromechanical automation. Simultaneously, the Bachelor of Laws prepares students to meet the requirements for admission to practise law in NSW. As well as studying fundamental legal theory, students engage with topics such as commercial, contracts and civil law, all of which have relevance in the engineering field.
The Legal Futures and Technology major can also build additional technical expertise. Combined, these courses provide an in-depth overview of the key challenges, opportunities and liabilities of the engineering field, producing graduates with the ability to provide strategic legal advice in an industry setting.
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The standard program shown is for a full-time student who has chosen the Electrical Engineering major and law options.
All options shown are law options and are to be drawn from those on offer in CBK90922.
Students wishing to study the major MAJ09443 Legal Futures and Technology need to study 76106 Technology Law, Policy and Ethics (Capstone 1) in the Autumn session of their final year and 76107 Applied Project in Law, Innovation and Technology (Capstone 2) in their final Spring session.
All electives shown are IT electives and are to be drawn from those on offer in CBK90781.
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Mathematics 1 | 33130 | 6 |
Physical Modelling | 68037 | 6 |
Foundations of Law | 70102 | 8 |
Ethics Law and Justice | 70103 | 6 |
Spring session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Introduction to Engineering Projects | 48230 | 6 |
Criminal Law and Procedure | 70114 | 8 |
Torts | 70311 | 8 |
Introduction to Electrical and Electronic Engineering | 48510 | 6 |
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Contracts | 70211 | 8 |
Australian Constitutional Law | 70616 | 8 |
Mathematics 2 | 33230 | 6 |
Spring session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Foundations of Electrical and Electronic Technology | 48521 | 6 |
Civil Practice | 70104 | 6 |
Electronics and Circuits | 48520 | 6 |
Evidence | 70109 | 6 |
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Introduction to Property and Commercial Law | 70327 | 6 |
Introductory Digital Systems | 48441 | 6 |
Fundamentals of C Programming | 48430 | 6 |
Administrative Law | 70617 | 8 |
Spring session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Real Property | 70317 | 8 |
Circuit Analysis and Design | 48530 | 6 |
Engineering Project Appraisal | 41200 | 6 |
Equity and Trusts | 70517 | 8 |
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Remedies | 71116 | 6 |
Introductory Embedded Systems | 48434 | 6 |
Signals and Systems | 48540 | 6 |
Corporate Law | 70417 | 8 |
Spring session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Electromechanical Automation | 48531 | 6 |
Control Design | 41277 | 6 |
Select 6 credit points from the following: | 6 | |
Electrical Engineering options | cbk92203 | 12 |
Public International Law | 70108 | 6 |
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Power Electronics | 41278 | 6 |
Electrical Power Systems | 48572 | 6 |
Select 6 credit points from the following: | 6 | |
Jurisprudence | 76008 | 6 |
Animal Law and Policy in Australia | 76033 | 6 |
Judgment and the Rule of Law | 76057 | 6 |
Gender and Law | 76081 | 6 |
Wickedness and Vice | 78039 | 6 |
Law and Literature | 76902 | 6 |
Criminology | 76012 | 6 |
Indigenous Peoples and the Law | 76068 | 6 |
Select 6 credit points of electives: | 6 |
Spring session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Select 24 credit points of options: | 24 |
Autumn session | Subject Code | Credit PointsA credit point is the unit of measure of workload for individual subjects. |
---|---|---|
Designing Sustainable Engineering Projects | 41201 | 6 |
Select 6 credit points from the following: | 6 | |
Electrical Engineering options | cbk92203 | 12 |
Students can graduate with a Bachelor of Laws (Honours) if they complete subjects 76090 Research Methodology and 76040 Research Thesis within the course. The degree may be awarded with first or second class honours, which does not require an additional honours year. The rules concerning the Bachelor of Laws (Honours) can be found in undergraduate course information.
Students who meet these criteria for honours are eligible for transfer into the appropriate undergraduate honours exit course on completion of all coursework and occurs just prior to graduation.
Students who undertake the Legal Futures and Technology major and who meet the criteria for honours can choose to undertake honours as part of their degree.
For relevant fee information, please choose from the following:
All students at UTS pay tuition fees to contribute towards the cost of their studies.
In 2024 all offers made to domestic undergraduate students will be for Commonwealth Supported Places (CSP), which means that the Australian government makes a substantial contribution towards the cost of your education, and you pay the balance through student contributions.
The amount you pay depends on your area of study and the number of credit points (cp) in which you enrol. At UTS 48 credit points is considered to be one Equivalent Full Time Study Load (EFTSL).
The table to the right shows the amount a student can expect to pay for one year of full-time study (1.0 EFTSL).
Students can choose to pay their student contribution upfront, or if eligible, can defer their fees through HECS-HELP.
In addition to tuition fees, students are required to pay a Services and Amenities Fee (SSAF). The purchase of textbooks and other course materials may also result in additional cost.
You can calculate your student contribution as a percentage of the amounts shown on the table. Fee rates are divided into four bands covering broad discipline areas. It is important to note that a particular subject within a course may fall within a different band.
For example, if you are enrolled in a 6-credit point Architecture subject, your contribution would be 6/48 x $9,314 = $1,164.
2025 student contribution - Area of Study | Amount for 48 cp |
---|---|
Law, Accounting, Administration, Economics, Commerce, Communications and Society and Culture | $16,992 |
Medicine, Dentistry and Veterinary Science | $13,241 |
Allied Health, Other Health, Built Environment, Computing, Visual & Performing Arts, Professional Pathway Psychology, Professional Pathway Social Work, Engineering, Surveying, Environmental Studies, Science and Pathology | $9,314 |
Education, Postgraduate Clinical Psychology, English, Mathematics, Statistics, Nursing or Foreign Languages and Agriculture | $4,627 |
Tuition fees for international undergraduate students can be found using tuition fees search.
Tuition fees must be paid in advance each session and are subject to annual increase. Fees for future year(s) published in fees search, whilst unlikely to change, are estimates only. UTS makes every effort to provide up to date future year(s) fee estimates and to limit any changes, however, UTS reserves the right to vary fees for future year(s) at any time.
For this course, the cost per credit point for 2025 is $986. The total credit points are 264.
All international students should familiarise themselves with the following documents:
In addition to tuition fees, students may be required to pay a Student Services and Amenities Fee (SSAF). Textbooks and other course materials will also result in additional costs.
UTS Alumni save 10%: alumni.uts.edu.au/advantage
For further information on costs related to your study at UTS, visit the international students' fees information page.
Career options include professions as a lawyer in areas of environmental law, technology legislation and technology-specific criminal law; consultant, legal adviser or manager to engineering corporations in Australia and overseas.
The course comprises 264 credit points and allows students to graduate with the separate degrees of Bachelor of Engineering Science and Bachelor of Laws. The study components for course completion are as follows.
The law component of 144 credit points is made up of:
The engineering component comprises 120 credit points of study, consisting of the core subjects in the Bachelor of Engineering Science and the field of practice subjects associated with the chosen engineering major.
For a current listing of subjects in each course refer to the study package directory.
To practise as a lawyer in NSW, students need to successfully complete an accredited legal academic qualification (e.g. Bachelor of Laws) and an accredited course of practical legal training (PLT), which UTS offers through its PLT program.
Students enrolled in this course may complete their practical legal training by undertaking a postgraduate course in PLT, such as the Graduate Certificate in Professional Legal Practice (C11232).
Requirement | Credit Points |
---|---|
CBK90178 Major choice (Engineering Science) | 84 |
STM90356 Core subjects | 36 |
STM90691 Law stream | 144 |
Total | 264 |
The course is normally completed in five-and-a-half years of full-time study. Full-time attendance is approximately 17 hours a week; timetable constraints may require attendance at daytime and evening classes in the law component.
Full time, on campusApplicants must have completed an Australian Year 12 qualification, Australian Qualifications Framework Diploma, or equivalent Australian or overseas qualification at the required level.
The English proficiency requirement for international students or local applicants with international qualifications is: IELTS Academic: 6.5 overall with a writing score of 6.0; or TOEFL iBT: 79-93 overall with a writing score of 21; or AE5: Pass; or PTE: 58-64 with a writing score of 50; or C1A/C2P: 176-184 with a writing score of 169.
Eligibility for admission does not guarantee offer of a place.
International studentsVisa requirement: To obtain a student visa to study in Australia, international students must enrol full time and on campus. Australian student visa regulations also require international students studying on student visas to complete the course within the standard full-time duration. Students can extend their courses only in exceptional circumstances.
Check to see if there are additional admission requirements for this course.
Additional information relating to this course, including the ATAR profile of domestic students who commenced this course in Autumn 2022, is located under UTS' admissions requirements, alongside information relating to the commencing student cohort who were enrolled in this course past the Autumn 2022 census date.
If you don't meet the admission requirements for this course, there may be alternative pathways to help you gain admission.
Inherent requirements are academic and non-academic requirements that are essential to the successful completion of a course. For more information about inherent requirements and where prospective and current students can get assistance and advice regarding these, see the UTS Inherent requirements page.
Prospective and current students should carefully read the Inherent Requirements Statement below and consider whether they might experience challenges in successfully completing this course.
UTS will make reasonable adjustments to teaching and learning, assessment, professional experiences, course related work experience and other course activities to facilitate maximum participation by students with disabilities, carer responsibilities, and religious or cultural obligations in their courses.
For course specific information see the Faculty of Law Inherent (Essential) Requirements Statement.
To find out further information regarding ATAR and selection ranks from previous applicants who received an offer to this course, please visit our Admissions Stats Tool
HSC Mathematics Extension 1; Physics; and English (Standard).
English (Advanced) is recommended. For the civil engineering major, Chemistry is recommended. For the software engineering major, a sound knowledge of the fundamentals of programming is recommended.
This course satisfies the requirements for admission to the Supreme Court of NSW as a lawyer, provided students complete a practical legal training (PLT) program, such as the Graduate Certificate in Professional Legal Practice (C11232).
Students wishing to obtain full recognition as graduate engineers have the option of articulating to the Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) (C09066) or Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) Diploma in Professional Engineering Practice (C09067) depending on entry requirements.
Find out about support services, the Australian education system, accommodation and more to help you get the most out of your study at UTS.
Part of The Faculty of Law
Here are a few important things for you to check out before you apply:
Domestic applicants can apply via the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) (opens an external site)
UAC code(s): 609050 (Autumn session)
Make a note of the relevant UAC code before starting the UAC application.
Autumn Session 2025
NOVEMBER 2024
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1
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Closing date for change of preferences (November Round 1)
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8
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UAC offers released (November Round 1)
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14
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Closing date for change of preferences (November Round 2)
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21
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UAC offers released (November Round 2)
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28
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Closing date for change of preferences (December Round 1)
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DECEMBER 2024
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5
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UAC offers released (December Round 1)
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18
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UTS Info Day
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18
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Closing date for change of preferences (December Round 2)
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23
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UAC offers released (December Round 2)
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JANUARY 2025
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2
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Closing date for change of preferences (January Round 1)
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9
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UAC offers released (January Round 1)
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16
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Closing date for change of preferences (January Round 2)
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23
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UAC offers released (January Round 2)
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30
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Closing date for change of preferences (February Round 1)
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FEBRUARY 2025
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3 - 14
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Autumn session orientation
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6
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UAC offers released (February Round 1)
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7
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Closing date for change of preferences (February Round 2)
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13
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UAC offers released (February Round 2)
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17
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Autumn session commences (main calendar)
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27
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Closing date for change of preferences (March Round 1)
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MARCH 2025
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3
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Last day to enrol for Autumn session
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6
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UAC offers released (March Round 1)
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20
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Autumn census date – last day to withdraw from subjects or apply for leave of absence
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Here are a few important things for you to check out before you apply:
You can meet an international student advisor at one of our events worldwide to ask questions and submit an application.
Visit the UTS Handbook for full academic dates. Visit essential information for international students for the application closing dates.
International applicants can apply to study through UTS International.
International applicants who are currently doing:
can apply through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) (opens external site).
Autumn Session 2025
Spring Session 2025
UTS acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the Boorooberongal people of the Dharug Nation, the Bidiagal people and the Gamaygal people, upon whose ancestral lands our university stands. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands.