• Best of luck to the class of 2025 for their HSC exams. You got this!
    Let us know your thoughts on the HSC exams here

Studying law but not set on being a lawyer? (1 Viewer)

notthedevil

I love the Pakenham line
Joined
Jun 15, 2017
Messages
123
Location
Melbourne
Gender
Male
HSC
2018
I was wondering if it would be a bad idea if I studied a combined law degree if I don't have a massive desire to become a lawyer in the future. I enjoy studying law and I'm interested in learning about it, but it might be impractical to lengthen my time at uni for something I likely might not really use.

Currently I wanna be an urban planner, so I've been looking at the City Planning/Law degree at UNSW, but it might be dumb to do that if my law degree doesn't really get used to become a lawyer. I guess if I did become a lawyer though my planning degree wouldn't end up being used anyways. It is 6.5 years long (urban planning degrees on their own are usually only 4 years) but I really enjoy city planning and I'm interested in law so I think I would be happy enough to sacrifice extra time if I'm learning things that I love, but it's still easier to just do a planning degree without law. The benefits though is that by the end I would be accredited with Planners Institute of Australia, and the Legal Profession Admission Board, so I would have some solid choices and credentials for different careers.

Any help is appreciated on whether its better to stick with city planning alone, or try a combined degree for the sake of personal interest/might wanna become a lawyer maybe.
 

strawberrye

Premium Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
3,289
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2013
Uni Grad
2018
Being in my final year of a combined law degree, I can tell you that choosing planning/law as a combination degree is extremely rare-probably one or two people out of each year's cohort would do it. And if you want to get admitted as a lawyer, you need to do an additional 6 months training after you graduate, so it comes to around 7 years (not accounting for potential extra qualification requirements to be a planner)-if that's not included in the degree.

I think you should definitely try out both, you will find a lot of law people don't become lawyers after graduating anyways, to be honest, 6.5 years is not that long in contrast to your whole working career, starting work 1/2 years later than your peers is not that big of a deal particularly if you want to explore your interests and find both to be interesting. And the best thing about a law degree is the critical thinking skills it teaches you which I think will help you in any career you end up choosing. Definitely try it out, and if you don't end up liking one or other, you can always drop/change/transfer courses-it is pretty common in uni. Don't feel like you need to make your one/only choice now and you can't change it sorta thing.
 

Zoinked

Beast
Joined
Nov 30, 2014
Messages
540
Gender
Male
HSC
2016
Not worth the money/time. 2 and a half years worth of income is one hell of an opportunity cost. Personally, I would blow my head off if I spent 6 years at uni.

My opinion is that you should study urban planning but then in your own time you can read things about the law such as http://www.austlii.edu.au/databases.html or a friends textbook, law journals, watch law youtube videos etc.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top