Abstract
This article will reflect on the impact of Brexit and of the introduction of the SQE on comparative law teaching in UK universities. Drawing on a 2025 survey by the British Association of Comparative Law (BACL) on how comparative law is currently taught in UK universities, it will examine the place of comparative law in the Law School curriculum. In so doing, it will identify changes since the last BACL teaching survey of 2002. Has Brexit, with EU law potentially demoted to an optional part of the Law degree curriculum, discouraged interest in studying comparative law? What has been the impact of the introduction of the SQE on Law School curricula? Having been given exclusive access to the findings of the 2025 BACL teaching survey, I will examine the challenges and choices universities and comparative law academics face. Is comparative law teaching an interesting but ornamental addition to a crammed curriculum or an important part of the UK university response to globalisation and the internationalisation of legal education?
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | The Law Teacher: The international Journal of Legal Education |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 29 Jan 2026 |
Research Groups and Themes
- Centre for Private and Commercial law
Keywords
- comparative law teaching
- SQE
- Brexit