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The Master of Philosophy in Law (MPhil)
is a research degree available only as an add-on to the
taught BCL and MJur
degrees. Admission to the MPhil is conditional upon good performance in the BCL
or MJur. Students must normally take up their MPhil places straight
after the BCL/MJur, although a one-year deferral is sometimes possible.
MPhil candidates must write a supervised thesis of up to 30,000 words, as well as completing a course in
legal research method. The MPhil is a one-year full-time programme. (Requests for MPhil extensions beyond
one calendar year are granted
only exceptionally and for at most one term. Candidates who fail
to submit their MPhil thesis within one calendar year will normally
be transferred to the MSt programme, which allows extra time for
submission.)
More
about funding for postgraduate students.
More
about the BCL and MJur
taught postgraduate degrees (including admissions).
More
about the MSt research degree, which does
not require a BCL or MJur first.
Our
postgraduate handbook (pdf), which explains in more detail what to
expect as a MPhil student, including more details of the course
in legal research method.
General
questions about life as a research student?
Check out our FAQs.
For
those interested in taking their research further, the MPhil
year can also double as the first year of the Doctor of Philosophy
(DPhil) programme.
A student intending to study for an Oxford DPhil must
anyway spend a year as a 'probationer research student' and then
take a 'qualifying test' to become a full DPhil student. If you are an MPhil
student during this first year, you can arrange to have your
proposal for DPhil work assessed at the same time as your MPhil
thesis; the MPhil examination then doubles as your qualifying test.
(NB it is possible
to pass the MPhil without passing the qualifying test.)
The route BCL/MJur (1 year) » MPhil (1 year) » DPhil (approx. 2 further
years) is regarded by the Law Faculty as the optimum route to a doctorate. The
BCL/MJur year creates an ideal platform from which to launch into serious
research. Despite having spent that extra year before turning to research,
those who follow this route tend to reach their doctoral goal more expeditiously
than others and often with less anxiety. Subject to certain regulations
your MPhil thesis can be incorporated into your DPhil thesis.
More
about the DPhil and the alternative routes
into it. |
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