Bachelor of Information and Communications Technology/Bachelor of Laws (2768)
- Approved Abbreviation: BICT/LLB
- Western Sydney University Program Code: 2768
- AQF Level: 7
CRICOS Code: 084731C
This program applies to students who commenced in 2022 or later.
Students should follow the program structure for the session start date relevant to the year they commenced.
The program offers multi-skilling and highly marketable career paths in information and communications technology and law. It equips students with professional legal skills and knowledge which are required by the Legal Profession Admission Board (LPAB) for admission to legal practice, solve non-legal problems and undertake specialised study in topical local and international law. The Information and Communications Technology component of the program is accredited by the Australian Computer Society and involves applied study of systems analysis and design, networking, programming and databases, web development, project management, communications, operating systems, human computer interaction and numeracy.
Early Exit
Students may exit this program on completion of 80 credit points with a 2827 Diploma in Laws (exit only)
Study Mode
Five years full-time. Information and Communications Technology subjects are offered at Penrith, Campbelltown and Parramatta campuses and Law subjects are offered at Campbelltown and Parramatta campuses. Students may be required to travel between campuses in order to complete their core subjects.
Program Advice
Prospective students should visit the following websites for general enquiries about this program.
Enquire about this program| Local Admission | International Admission |
Location
Campus | Attendance | Mode | Advice |
---|---|---|---|
Campbelltown Campus | Full Time | Internal | See above |
Parramatta Campus - Victoria Road | Full Time | Internal | See above |
Accreditation
Graduates from this program are eligible to apply to the Legal Profession Admission Board for admission to legal practice in NSW after undertaking prescribed practical legal training. The Bachelor of Information and Communications Technology is accredited with the Australian Computer Society (ACS) at Professional level.
Inherent Requirements
There are inherent requirements for this program that you must meet in order to complete your program and graduate. Make sure you read and understand the requirements for this program online.
Work Integrated Learning
Western Sydney University seeks to enhance student learning experiences by enabling students to engage in the culture, expectations and practices of their profession or discipline. This program includes a placement or other community-based unpaid practical experience.
There is an optional work component available in this program. Please contact the Program Advisor listed above for information.
International students should be aware that if an elective is a requirement of the program but the work itself was not registered with CRICOS, students can still complete these electives but it would be counted towards the work limitation. For more details, refer to the 'Work Integrated Learning (WIL) for international students' website.
Admission
Assumed knowledge: HSC Mathematics and any two units of HSC English (or equivalent)
Applications from Australian and New Zealand citizens and holders of permanent resident visas may be made via the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) or directly through the Western Portal. Use the links below to apply via UAC or Western Sydney University. Applications made directly to Western Sydney do not have an application fee.
http://www.uac.edu.au/
https://westernsydney.uac.edu.au/ws/
Applicants who have undertaken studies overseas may have to provide proof of proficiency in English. Local applicants who are applying through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) will find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UAC website. Local applicants applying directly to the University should also use the information provided on the UAC website.
International students currently completing an Australian Year 12 in or outside Australia, an International Baccalaureate in Australia or a New Zealand National Certificate of Educational Achievement (NCEA) level 3 must apply via UAC International.
All other International applicants must apply directly to the University via the International Office.
International students applying to the University through the International Office can find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on their website.
Overseas qualifications must be deemed by the Australian Education International - National Office of Overseas Skills Recognition (AEI-NOOSR) to be equivalent to Australian qualifications in order to be considered by UAC and Western Sydney University.
Special Requirements Prerequisites
Students enrolling in these subjects may need to have a National Police Certificate and consent or prohibited employment declarations as they may be conducting their placement in circumstances where they work with minors. This would be managed on an as needs basis:
- LAWS 3074 Judicial Internship
- LAWS 3077 Legal Internship
- LAWS 3080 Street Law Clinic
- LAWS 4012 First Nations Peoples' Access to Justice Clinic
- JUST 3011 Issues in the Criminal Justice System (corrective services field trip requirement) also records and identity check.
The following subject requires a visa for the relevant country and the ability to travel at a specified time:
Program Structure
Qualification for a double degree in law requires the successful completion of 400 credit points comprising all subjects listed in the recommended sequence.
To gain early exit from the combined degree, with a Bachelor of Information and Communications Technology students are required to complete 16 technology subjects and the first eight law subjects listed in the recommended sequence.
Students enrolled in the 2768 Bachelor of Information and Communications Technology/Bachelor of Laws will only be eligible to graduate from their Bachelor of Laws degree upon completion of the entire 400 credit point program. Students enrolled in this program who wish to graduate with a standalone law degree prior to completion of the entire Bachelor of Information and Communications Technology component must transfer to program 2502 Bachelor of Laws (Non Graduate Entry) which requires the completion of 320 credit points (inclusive of 80 credit points of non-LLB study).
Students may early exit with the Diploma in Laws on completion of 80 credit points, comprising 20 credit points of specified Law core subjects and 60 credit points of Law core or alternate subjects, as provided in the program structure. Please refer to the links above for details.
It may be possible to vary the sequence of subjects so that students study a greater concentration of either law or technology each semester, to minimise travel between campuses and to overcome timetabling problems. Students should speak to their Academic Program Advisor as needed. However students who enrol in LAWS 1003 Fundamentals of Australian Law must also be enrolled in LAWS 2004 Criminal Law and students who enrol in LAWS 1009 Legal Analysis and Critique must also be enrolled in LAWS 2013 Torts Law.
Recommended Sequence
Full-time start-year intake
Year 1 | ||
---|---|---|
Autumn session | Credit Points | |
LAWS 1003 | Fundamentals of Australian Law | 10 |
LAWS 2004 | Criminal Law | 10 |
COMP 1005 | Programming Fundamentals | 10 |
INFS 1006 | Systems Analysis and Design | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Spring session | ||
LAWS 1009 | Legal Analysis and Critique | 10 |
LAWS 2013 | Torts Law | 10 |
COMP 2015 | Programming Techniques | 10 |
INFS 2001 | Database Design and Development | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Year 2 | ||
Autumn session | ||
LAWS 2003 | Contracts | 10 |
LAWS 2015 | Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics | 10 |
COMP 2020 | Technologies for Web Applications | 10 |
INFS 2006 | Object Oriented Analysis | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Spring session | ||
LAWS 2001 | Alternative Dispute Resolution | 10 |
INFS 3017 | Web Systems Development | 10 |
MATH 1030 | Statistics for Business | 10 |
COMP 2004 | Computer Networking | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Year 3 | ||
Autumn session | ||
COMP 3015 | Operating Systems Programming | 10 |
INFO 3003 | Human-Computer Interaction | 10 |
INFO 3008 | Professional Development | 10 |
COMP 3007 | Computer Networks and Internets | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Spring session | ||
LAWS 2008 | Government and Public Law | 10 |
COMP 3018 | Professional Experience | 10 |
COMP 3020 | Social Web Analytics | 10 |
INFO 3011 | Social Computing | 10 |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Year 4 | ||
Autumn session | ||
LAWS 3018 | Equity & Trusts | 10 |
LAWS 3082 | Property Law | 10 |
Select two LLB alternate subjects | 20 | |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Spring session | ||
LAWS 3081 | Administrative Law | 10 |
LAWS 3045 | Law of Associations | 10 |
Select two LLB alternate subjects | 20 | |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Year 5 | ||
Autumn session | ||
LAWS 4015 | Constitutional Law | 10 |
LAWS 4004 | Criminal Procedure and Evidence | 10 |
Select two LLB alternate subjects | 20 | |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Spring session | ||
LAWS 4013 | Civil Procedure and Arbitration | 10 |
LAWS 4014 | Remedies | 10 |
Select two LLB alternate subjects | 20 | |
Credit Points | 40 | |
Total Credit Points | 400 |
LLB Alternate Subjects
Students must complete 80 credit points of subjects from the list of Bachelor of Laws alternate subjects below.
Subject | Title | Credit Points |
---|---|---|
LAWS 4017 | Access to Justice Clinic | 10 |
LAWS 3001 | Advanced Family Law | 10 |
LAWS 4003 | Advanced Taxation Law | 10 |
LAWS 3002 | Advanced Torts and Civil Wrongs | 10 |
LAWS 3003 | Advocacy | 10 |
LAWS 3004 | Anti-Discrimination Law | 10 |
LAWS 3005 | Australian Competition Law | 10 |
LAWS 3006 | Australian Consumer Law | 10 |
LAWS 3007 | Banking and Securities Law | 10 |
LAWS 2014 | Bioethics | 10 |
LAWS 3011 | Comparative Law: Legal Systems of the World | 10 |
LAWS 3013 | Conflict of Laws | 10 |
LAWS 3014 | Corporate Governance | 10 |
LAWS 3015 | Cyber Law and Justice | 10 |
LAWS 4010 | Designing Law Apps for Access to Justice | 10 |
LAWS 3016 | Elder Law | 10 |
LAWS 3022 | Family Dispute Resolution | 10 |
LAWS 3023 | Family Law | 10 |
LAWS 2005 | Financial Services Law | 10 |
LAWS 2007 | First Peoples and the Australian Legal System | 10 |
LAWS 4012 | First Nations Peoples' Access to Justice Clinic | 10 |
LAWS 3024 | Foundations of Chinese Law | 10 |
LAWS 3025 | Foundations of Indian Law | 10 |
LAWS 3083 | Gender and the Law | 10 |
LAWS 3028 | Human Rights and the Asia Pacific | 10 |
LAWS 3027 | Human Rights Law | 10 |
LAWS 3029 | Immigration and Refugee Law | 10 |
JUST 3008 | Independent Study (Law) | 10 |
LAWS 3030 | Information and Data Governance Law and Regulation | 10 |
LAWS 3031 | Insolvency Law and Policy | 10 |
LAWS 3032 | Intellectual Property | 10 |
LAWS 3033 | International Business Transactions Law | 10 |
LAWS 4006 | International Climate Law | 10 |
LAWS 3034 | International Criminal Law | 10 |
LAWS 4007 | International Environmental Law | 10 |
LAWS 3036 | International Trade Law | 10 |
LAWS 3039 | Islam, International Law and Human Rights | 10 |
JUST 3011 | Issues in the Criminal Justice System | 10 |
LAWS 3074 | Judicial Internship | 10 |
LAWS 3042 | Jurisprudence | 10 |
LAWS 3084 | Law and Literature | 10 |
LAWS 3079 | Law, Economics, Ethics and Change | 10 |
LAWS 3044 | Law and Public Policy (Development and Implementation) | 10 |
LAWS 3046 | Law of Employment | 10 |
LAWS 3047 | Law of International Organisations | 10 |
LAWS 3048 | Law of the Sea | 10 |
LAWS 3075 | Law's Self-Understanding | 10 |
LAWS 3078 | Legal, Economic and Social Transformation in Taiwan | 10 |
LAWS 3077 | Legal Internship | 10 |
LAWS 4016 | Legal Research and Methodology | 10 |
LAWS 3049 | Media Law | 10 |
JUST 2013 | Mediation | 10 |
LAWS 3050 | Medical Law | 10 |
LAWS 3052 | Mental Health Law | 10 |
LAWS 3053 | Moot Court | 10 |
LAWS 3055 | Planning and Environment Law | 10 |
LAWS 3056 | Practising in the Public Interest | 10 |
LAWS 3061 | Public Health Law | 10 |
LAWS 3063 | Public International Law | 10 |
LAWS 4008 | Revenue Law | 10 |
LAWS 3067 | Self-Managed Superannuation and Trusts | 10 |
LAWS 3068 | Space Law - Commercial Aspects | 10 |
LAWS 3080 | Street Law Clinic | 10 |
LAWS 3076 | Technology, Innovation and the Law | 10 |
LAWS 3071 | Wills and Succession | 10 |
LAWS 3072 | Work Health and Safety Law | 10 |
Equivalent Subjects
The equivalent subjects listed below counts toward completion of this program for students who passed these subjects in 2019 or earlier.
JUST 2002 - Bioethics, replaced by LAWS 2014 Bioethics
The equivalent subjects listed below counts toward completion of this program for students who passed these subjects in 2021 or earlier.
LAWS 3008 - Civil Procedure and Arbitration (200813), replaced by LAWS 4013 Civil Procedure and Arbitration
LAWS 3064 - Remedies (200756), replaced by LAWS 4014 Remedies
LAWS 2002 - Constitutional Law (200009), replaced by LAWS 4015 Constitutional Law
LAWS 4001 - Administrative Law (200013), replaced by LAWS 3081 Administrative Law
LAWS 2011 - Property Law (200012), replaced by LAWS 3082 Property Law
LAWS 3059 - Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics (200020), replaced by LAWS 2015 Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics
The subjects listed below count towards completion of the program for students who may have passed subjects in the list in 2022 or earlier.
JUST 4001 Clinical Legal Placement, replaced by LAWS 4017 Access to Justice Clinic
Replaced Subjects
The subjects listed below count towards completion of this program for students who passed these subjects in 2021 or earlier.
LAWS 3043 - Land Transactions Law (200021)
LAWS 3035 - International Moot Court (200663)
LAWS 4002 - Advanced Constitutional Law (200755)
LAWS 4009 - Transaction Law (200758)
LAWS 3066 - Revenue Law Industry Placement (201007)
LAWS 3073 - Elder Law Industry Placement (201020)
JUST 2009 - Law Economics and Business Ethics (200296)
LAWS 4011 - Law Honours Dissertation (200700)
Please note that the availability of Bachelor of Laws Alternate Subjects may vary from session to session. New subjects may become available and some discontinued. The School of Law will publish information on which subjects are available in a session.