Skip to main content
Start of main content.

Bachelor of Digital Transformation/ Bachelor of Laws

Where will your degree take you?

The Bachelor of Digital Transformation / Bachelor of Laws enables you to graduate with two undergraduate degrees. The combined degrees provide you with the professional outcomes and opportunities of both individual degrees. 

Completing these combined degrees will provide opportunities for a range of careers in the legal industry, private and international organisations, government and not for profit sectors. 

To become a legal practitioner, you are required to complete a practical legal training program such as the Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice (GDLP) or a traineeship following the completion of the Bachelor of Laws degree. Graduates may seek to practise law whilst utilising an understanding of the global environment or employ their understanding of law to work in industries with a global perspective such as diplomacy, foreign affairs, or international business with a background in compliance, regulation, and intellectual property.

Outcomes

Solicitor

Upon being admitted to the legal profession, you can work as a solicitor in a law firm, government organisation or community legal centre. You can choose to specialise in a particular area of practice or be a generalist.

Disruptor and innovator

Emergent technologies are disrupting the way lawyers provide advice, facilitate transactions, and solve problems. The sector needs law graduates who are educated and trained not only in traditional legal reasoning and mastery of foundational legal principles, but who have also acquired entrepreneurial skills, digital literacies and a sophisticated understanding of the impact of technology upon the law and legal practice.

Digital solutions

As new technologies and capabilities are developed at rapid speed, the demand for digital solutions specialists is matching pace. Use your expertise in the intersection of humans, law and technology and your experience in design thinking to develop digital and mobile solutions to drive change across the legal sector.

Non-legal profession

Graduating with a law degree doesn’t necessarily require you to be admitted as a legal practitioner – the program builds a wide array of legal skills that can be used cross-disciplinarily, including critical thinking, analysis, problem solving, conflict resolution and advocacy. You’ll be equipped to work in non-legal roles like management consulting, politics, investment banking and more.

Professional accreditation

Admission to Legal Practice

If you want to be admitted as a legal practitioner, you are required to complete a practical legal training program such as the Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice (GDLP) or a traineeship following the completion of the Bachelor of Laws degree.

Further information on becoming a legal practitioner in QLD is available from the Queensland Law Society.

Admission to Legal Practice

If you want to be admitted as a legal practitioner, you are required to complete a practical legal training program such as the Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice (GDLP) or a traineeship following the completion of the Bachelor of Laws degree.

Further information on becoming a legal practitioner in QLD is available from the Queensland Law Society.

Program learning outcomes

Program Learning Outcomes provide a broad and measurable set of standards that incorporate a range of knowledge, skills and abilities that will be achieved on completion of the program. These outcomes will help you determine whether this program aligns with your professional pathway, career and learning goals.

video

Challenging and transforming the future of work

Discover more

Build the career of your dreams with a Transformation degree

Explore how you can become a leading driver of change with Bond's Transformation degrees.

Read more
Read more about Build the career of your dreams with a Transformation degree