The Moral Life of the Law summer course in Oxford, by Lady Margaret Hall.
What kinds of people, values, and relationships does Law assume? What is the Law’s vision of the good life? Whose morailty counts? This course explores Law and legal doctrine not as a neutral instrument but as a moral architecture.
We will begin with the foundation of Law, personhood, and responsibility, considering natural law, legal positivism, and the justification of state authority. We will proceed to examine the notions of autonomy, Justice, and moral disobedience, investigating whether it can be morally justified to break the law, and how the law can address human dignity, inclusion, and equality. The course concludes by looking at the connetcions between law and citizenship, evaluating whether law can be both morally grounded and democratically plural.
Join this course for a wide-ranging introduction to the moral life of the law, equipping yourself with skills of critical analysis and nuanced evaluation of vital topics of our time.
LMH Summer Programmes are designed and delivered by experienced academics from Lady Margaret Hall and across the University of Oxford, and are taught using the Oxford teaching model, which emphasises personalised small-group learning.
In a series of thought-provoking lectures and lively seminar discussions you will learn about cutting-edge research, expand your core knowledge, and explore new ideas and concepts among peers with diverse international perspectives and academic backgrounds.
Tutorials, the conclusion of each week’s study, are an intellectual thrill. They are a unique opportunity for focused and personalised attention from an expert academic and a space for enthusiastic debate of important ideas. Alongside no more than two to three other students, you will present and discuss your work, accept constructive criticism, and engage with the ideas of your fellow students. These rigorous academic discussions help develop and facilitate learning in a way that cannot be done with lectures alone.
On a three-week LMH Summer Programme students produce one piece of assessed work every week, which is submitted to the tutor and then discussed in a tutorial. At the end of each week you will receive a percentage grade for your submitted work. Each week’s work counts for a third of your final percentage grade, so your final grade is an average of the mark received for each piece of work. Students who stay for six or nine weeks will receive a separate grade for each 3-week course.
Lady Margaret Hall will provide a transcript of your assessed work, and can send this directly to your home institution if required. LMH Summer Programmes are designed to be eligible for academic credit, and we will communicate with your home institution to facilitate this as needed. As a guide, we recommend the award of 15 CATS / 7.5 ECTS / 4 US Credits for each 3-week course.
Learn more on the official Lady Margaret Hall website .
Lady Margaret Hall Frequently Asked Questions
More about us and responses to frequently asked questions
Still have questions? See the full FAQs page.
Related Courses
Globalisation, Populism, and the Politics of Identity
While the world has been moving increasingly towards greater inter-connectivity through trade, infrastructure, communications, and migration, criticism of ‘globalisation’ has...
Introduction to Cognitive Psychology
How are we able to focus on one thing rather than something else? Why do we remember some things and...
Climate Law and Policy
Perhaps the greatest challenge facing humankind is anthropogenic climate change, the rapid warming of the earth’s temperature driven by the...
International Law
Knowledge of the subject of International Law is vital, not just to those who hope to become lawyers, but to...