Bachelor of Laws and Biomedical Science

5 Years On Campus Bachelors Program

Monash University

Program Overview

The Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Biomedical Science (5 years, on-campus) at Monash University (Clayton Campus, Melbourne, Australia) is a high-impact double degree designed for students who want to combine legal expertise with a strong foundation in biomedical and life sciences. It suits ambitious learners who are interested in health, medicine, research, or biotech but also want to develop the critical thinking and professional skills of a qualified legal practitioner.

Across the program, students explore how science and law intersect in real-world issues such as healthcare regulation, biotechnology innovation, pharmaceuticals, ethics, and public policy, preparing them for highly specialised and influential career paths.

Curriculum Structure

Year 1

In the first year, students build a strong scientific and legal foundation through introductory units in both disciplines. You’ll typically study core law subjects such as Foundations of Law and Legal Practice and Legal Reasoning, alongside biomedical units like Cell and Tissue Biology and Chemistry for the Biomedical Sciences. This year focuses on developing critical thinking, scientific literacy, and an understanding of how law operates in society.

Year 2

Year 2 deepens your understanding of core legal systems and human biology. Law study expands into areas such as Criminal Law and Contract Law, while biomedical science progresses into subjects like Human Anatomy and Physiology and Biochemistry. Students begin to connect scientific knowledge with legal frameworks, especially in health-related contexts.

Year 3

At this stage, students engage with more advanced legal reasoning and biomedical complexity. Law units may include Torts and Constitutional Law, while biomedical science explores areas such as Human Genetics and Microbiology. This year strengthens analytical skills and introduces more specialised scientific and legal problem-solving.

Year 4

Year 4 often involves more specialised legal training alongside advanced biomedical electives. Law studies typically include Administrative Law and Equity and Trusts, while biomedical science may focus on Pharmacology, Molecular Biology, or Neuroscience. Students start tailoring their studies toward interests like health law, research regulation, or biotech policy.

Year 5

The final year focuses on professional readiness and integration of both disciplines. Law students complete advanced units such as Evidence Law and Corporate Law, while biomedical science electives allow deeper exploration of specialised topics or research projects. Many students also undertake capstone-style learning that connects legal practice with biomedical innovation and ethics.

Focus Areas

Health and medical law, biotechnology regulation, biomedical research, pharmaceutical policy, ethics in healthcare, intellectual property in science, and public health governance.

Learning Outcomes

Graduates develop strong analytical and research skills across both scientific and legal domains, with the ability to interpret complex biomedical data and apply legal reasoning to health and science-related issues. They gain the capability to work in interdisciplinary environments where law, medicine, and innovation intersect.

Professional Alignment (Accreditation)

The Law component is accredited for professional legal training pathways in Australia, supporting progression toward becoming a legal practitioner after completing required legal training (such as Practical Legal Training). The Biomedical Science degree aligns with pathways into research, postgraduate medicine, biotechnology, and health-related professional study.

Reputation (Employability & Rankings)

Monash University is consistently ranked among the top global universities for Law and Life Sciences in major rankings such as QS World University Rankings, with strong graduate employability outcomes across both legal and biomedical sectors. The double-degree structure is highly regarded by employers for producing graduates with rare interdisciplinary expertise.

Experiential Learning (Research, Projects, Internships etc.)

At Monash University, students in the Bachelor of Laws and Biomedical Science (Clayton Campus) learn through a strong mix of real legal practice environments and hands-on scientific training, so you’re not just studying theory—you’re actively applying it from early in the degree. You’ll develop courtroom-style reasoning, legal research skills, and biomedical investigation techniques using industry-standard tools, specialist laboratories, and authentic case-based learning environments. The program is designed so you can move between law and science seamlessly, building confidence in both fields through practical exposure and collaborative problem-solving.

Experiential learning is embedded through Monash’s professional-grade facilities, research institutes, and clinical-style training environments that mirror real legal and biomedical workplaces:

  • Monash Law Clinics : opportunities to work on real client matters under supervision, gaining practical legal experience in community legal services
  • Moot Courtrooms : simulated courtroom environments where students practice advocacy, legal argumentation, and trial procedures
  • Legal Research Tools (Westlaw / LexisNexis) : professional databases used for case law research, statutory interpretation, and legal analysis
  • Biomedical Science Laboratories : advanced teaching labs for genetics, microbiology, biochemistry, and human physiology experimentation
  • Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute (BDI) : research environment focused on cutting-edge biomedical science, disease research, and innovation pathways
  • Anatomy & Physiology Teaching Facilities : practical learning spaces supporting detailed study of the human body and medical sciences
  • Group-Based Case Learning : collaborative legal problem-solving and scientific research projects that develop teamwork and interdisciplinary thinking
  • Library & Digital Learning Systems (Monash Library – Sir Louis Matheson Library) : access to extensive legal texts, scientific journals, and digital research databases supporting both disciplines
  • Industry-Aligned Learning Tasks : simulated legal casework and biomedical research scenarios reflecting real-world professional practice

Progression & Future Opportunities

Graduates of the Bachelor of Laws and Biomedical Science (Monash University) are uniquely positioned to work at the intersection of law, healthcare, and scientific innovation, where demand for interdisciplinary professionals continues to grow. You’ll graduate with the ability to interpret complex biomedical issues through a legal lens, preparing you for impactful roles in both the legal system and health/biotech sectors.

Typical career pathways include: health lawyer, biotech policy advisor, pharmaceutical regulatory specialist, medical research consultant, or intellectual property lawyer.

: Career outcomes include strong employability across law, government, healthcare, and life sciences sectors

  • Monash Career Connect : dedicated employability service offering internships, clerkship support, career coaching, and employer networking opportunities
  • Law Professional Pathways (Clerkships & PLT preparation) : structured support toward becoming a practising lawyer in Australia through accredited legal training pathways
  • Monash Industry Links (Hospitals, biotech firms, and legal partners) : connections with major health institutions, research organisations, and law firms supporting internships and graduate recruitment
  • Graduate Employability Support : resume workshops, mock interviews, and direct employer engagement programs tailored to law and science students
  • Professional Accreditation Value : Law degree components are accredited for admission to legal practice in Australia after completing Practical Legal Training (PLT)
  • Work-Integrated Learning Opportunities : real-world exposure through legal clinics, research environments, and biomedical project-based learning
  • Graduate Outcomes & Salary (Australia benchmark) : law and biomedical graduates from leading universities typically see median starting salaries in the range of AUD $70,000–$85,000, with higher growth potential in legal practice, pharmaceuticals, and regulatory roles as experience increases

Further Academic Progression:
After graduation, students can pursue the Practical Legal Training (PLT) to qualify as a practising lawyer in Australia, or continue into postgraduate study such as a Master of Laws (LLM), Juris Doctor (JD) (if specialising further), or advanced biomedical degrees including Honours, Master of Biomedical Science, Master of Public Health, or PhD research pathways at Monash or other global universities.

Program Key Stats

$55,700
$13,558
$ 125

Febr Intake : 1st NovJuly Intake : 30th Apr


Yes

Eligibility Criteria

ABB
3.0
36
85

1360
30
7.0
94
95

Additional Information & Requirements

Country Requirements

Career Options

  • Medical Lawyer
  • Health Policy Advisor
  • Clinical Research Associate
  • Biomedical Scientist
  • Patent Attorney
  • Pharmaceutical Regulatory Affairs Specialist
  • Healthcare Compliance Officer
  • Bioethics Consultant
  • Medical Device Regulatory Specialist
  • Forensic Scientist

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