Only show careers starting with
| A | B | C | D | E | F |
| G | H | I | J | K | L |
| M | N | O | P | Q | R |
| S | T | U | V | W | X |
| Y | Z |
You are here: Home > Courses > Course Search Results > Monash University > Master of Regulatory Studies
| Campus | Mid Year Intake? | Study Mode | Entry Requirements | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| City - Law Chambers | Yes | Full-time internal, Part-time internal | Bachelor of Laws or equivalent legal qual (credit average); Bachelor of Laws or equivalent legal qual and 2 years' relevant work experience; or any degree and 2 years' relevant specialisation work experience |
||
The Master of Regulatory Studies is offered by Monash Law School in conjunction with the faculties of Business and Economics, Arts, Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences and the Victorian College of Pharmacy at Monash University. It was specifically designed to address the nature, extent and implications of the regulatory environment in a broad, cross-disciplinary approach. The study of regulation is a relatively new discipline which links and transcends the boundaries between economics, law, politics, criminology, sociology, psychology, organisational theory and public administration. This unique degree will provide practitioners and scholars with a core set of ideas, theories and skills to apply to their regulatory activities and manage regulatory challenges.
Regulatory studies
8 coursework units (including 5 specialisation units). Students may undertake a combination of coursework units and a minor research thesis.
Bachelor of Laws or equivalent legal qual (credit average); Bachelor of Laws or equivalent legal qual and 2 years' relevant work experience; or any degree and 2 years' relevant specialisation work experience
Articulates from graduate diploma degree programs.
| 2,589 | 205 | 98% | 9% | 89% |
| Undergraduate students | International students | School leavers | Over 25 years old | Part time students |
|---|
Not available.
| 11% | 48% | 39% | 2% |
| Public sector | Private practice | Private industry | Working overseas |
|---|
Lawyers provide advice, write documents and conduct negotiations on legal matters, and may represent clients in court and tribunal proceedings.

