Course description
MSc
Programme description
Fifteen months full-time
The Telecommunications with Law programme is a joint collaboration between Electronic Engineering and the Centre for Commercial Law Studies (CCLS). The programme consists of eight taught modules; five of these are technical and three concentrate on legal issues. In addition students also undertake a compulsory law orientation weekend and a preparatory law module, before starting the three legal modules.
This programme is aimed at graduates planning to work at providing underlying Internet software and infrastructure. To do this requires knowledge of Internet protocols and applications, an understanding of how the Internet fits into, and benefits, business and how the underlying infrastructure can enhance or limit possibilities. The programme combines in depth coverage of the software technologies for the Internet plus advanced law modules relevant to the commercial and IT sector.
Programme outline
Our Telecommunications with Law programmes are taken over 15 months. The first two semesters run from September to April where you would study the five technical modules of the programme and start your project. The written examination for the technical modules takes place in May and June of each year. The three optional law modules begin the following September and conclude in December, with the examinations in January.
Semester 1
* Advanced Software Technologies
* Network Computing and Internet Technologies
* Internet Infrastructure
* Law Orientation Weekend – compulsory but not assessed as part of the degree
Semester 2
* Multimedia Systems
* Internet Databases
Semester 3
A choice of three Law modules* taught by the Centre for Commercial Law Studies from the following list of options:
* Computer Crime
* IT Outsourcing
* Internet Content Regulation
* Intellectual Property Foundation
* European Telecoms Law
* International Telecoms Law
* Privacy and Data Protection
* Trade Marks and Domain Names
* e-Commerce
*Subject to availability
Assessment
All students are required to take written examinations in May/June. To obtain an MSc, students must gain passes in six of the eight modules taken with an overall average of 50 per cent.
In addition to the above, the MSc requires that a satisfactory individual project should be completed. MSc students who do not pass the written examinations are only allowed to attempt the project after passing resit examinations the following May.