England Β· WJEC EduqasSyllabus
Legal Studies syllabus, dot point by dot point
Every dot point in the England Legal Studiessyllabus, with a focused answer for each one. Click any dot point for a worked explainer, past exam questions, and links to related dot points. Written by Claude Opus 4.8, Anthropic's latest AI.
Criminal Law (Components 2 and 3)
Module overview β- What must the prosecution prove for any crime: the guilty act, the guilty mind, and the link between them?The general elements of criminal liability: actus reus (conduct, omissions and causation), mens rea (intention and subjective recklessness), the coincidence of actus reus and mens rea, transferred malice and strict liability.18 min answer β
- What is murder, and how do the partial defences reduce it to voluntary manslaughter?Murder and voluntary manslaughter: the actus reus and mens rea of murder, and the partial defences of loss of control and diminished responsibility under the Coroners and Justice Act 2009 that reduce murder to voluntary manslaughter.18 min answer β
- Which general defences can reduce or remove criminal liability, and what must each one prove?The general defences: insanity and automatism, intoxication (voluntary and involuntary), self-defence and the prevention of crime, consent, and duress by threats and of circumstances.18 min answer β
- How can a person be guilty of manslaughter without any intention to kill or cause serious harm?Involuntary manslaughter: unlawful act (constructive) manslaughter (an unlawful and dangerous act causing death) and gross negligence manslaughter (a breach of a duty of care, causing death, that is grossly negligent under Adomako).17 min answer β
- What are the five non-fatal offences against the person, and how do their actus reus and mens rea escalate?The non-fatal offences against the person: assault and battery (common law), assault occasioning actual bodily harm (s47), malicious wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm (s20), and wounding or causing grievous bodily harm with intent (s18) under the Offences Against the Person Act 1861.18 min answer β
- What are the five elements of theft, and what turns theft into robbery?Property offences: theft under the Theft Act 1968 (appropriation, property, belonging to another, dishonesty and intention permanently to deprive) and robbery under section 8 (theft with the use or threat of force in order to steal).17 min answer β
Law Making (Component 1)
Module overview β- What is delegated legislation, what forms does it take, and how is it kept in check?Delegated legislation: the enabling Act and the types of delegated legislation (Orders in Council, statutory instruments and by-laws), the reasons for it, and the controls by Parliament and the courts.16 min answer β
- How does case law bind later courts, and how can judges avoid an inconvenient precedent?Judicial precedent: the doctrine of stare decisis, ratio decidendi and obiter dicta, binding and persuasive precedent, the court hierarchy and the Practice Statement, and the ways of avoiding precedent (overruling, reversing and distinguishing).17 min answer β
- Who keeps the law under review and proposes changes, and why are many recommendations never enacted?Law reform: the agencies that influence and propose reform (the Law Commission, Royal Commissions and public inquiries, pressure groups and the media), the processes of repeal, consolidation and codification, and the limits on reform.15 min answer β
- How does a proposal become an Act of Parliament, and what is the significance of parliamentary sovereignty?Parliamentary law making: the legislative process (Green and White Papers, the types of Bill, the stages of a Bill through the Commons and Lords and the Royal Assent), the influences on Parliament, and the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty.16 min answer β
- How do judges interpret the words of an Act of Parliament, and which approaches and aids do they use?Statutory interpretation: the literal, golden and mischief rules and the purposive approach, the rules of language, intrinsic and extrinsic aids (including Pepper v Hart), and the impact of EU law and the Human Rights Act 1998.17 min answer β
Legal Skills and Method (AO2 and AO3)
Module overview β- How do you build a balanced, critical argument that evaluates the law and reaches a judgement?The evaluation essay (AO3): structuring a balanced argument, analysing strengths and weaknesses, using examples, cases and reform proposals, and reaching a reasoned conclusion.16 min answer β
- How do you turn a set of facts into a reasoned legal conclusion that wins AO2 marks?The scenario application question (AO2): the IRAC structure (issue, rule, application, conclusion), identifying the legal issues in a factual problem, applying authority to the facts, and reaching a reasoned conclusion.16 min answer β
- How do you use cases and statutes as authority accurately and to best effect in an answer?Using cases and statutes accurately: citing the relevant statute (and section) and the leading case by name, stating the legal principle correctly, knowing when authority has been overruled or amended, and deploying authority across all assessment objectives.15 min answer β
The Law of Contract (Components 2 and 3)
Module overview β- What remedies can the innocent party claim when a contract is broken?Remedies for breach of contract: the aim and measure of damages (expectation loss, causation, remoteness under Hadley v Baxendale and mitigation), liquidated damages and penalties, and the equitable remedies (specific performance and injunction).16 min answer β
- How does a contract come to an end, and what happens when performance becomes impossible?Discharge of contract: discharge by performance (and the softening doctrines), by agreement, by breach (actual and anticipatory), and by frustration (impossibility, illegality and radical change, and the consequences under the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943).17 min answer β
- What are the essential ingredients that turn an agreement into a binding contract?Formation of contract: offer and acceptance (including invitations to treat, the postal rule and revocation), consideration (sufficiency, adequacy and past consideration), and the intention to create legal relations.18 min answer β
- What are the terms of a contract, how are they classified, and when can a party exclude liability?The terms of a contract: express and implied terms (including statutory implied terms), the classification of terms (conditions, warranties and innominate terms), and exclusion clauses and their statutory controls.17 min answer β
- What factors can undermine an apparently valid contract, and what is their effect?Vitiating factors: misrepresentation (fraudulent, negligent and innocent), its requirements (a false statement of fact that induces the contract) and remedies (rescission and damages), and an outline of other vitiating factors such as duress and economic duress.17 min answer β
The Law of Tort (Components 2 and 3)
Module overview β- When does one person owe another a duty of care, and how is a negligence claim proved?Liability in negligence: the duty of care (Donoghue v Stevenson and the Caparo test), breach of duty (the reasonable person and the risk factors), and damage (factual causation by the but for test and remoteness under The Wagon Mound).18 min answer β
- How does the law protect the use and enjoyment of land from interference, and when is there strict liability for an escape?Nuisance and the rule in Rylands v Fletcher: private nuisance (unlawful interference with the use and enjoyment of land, the factors and defences), public nuisance, and the rule in Rylands v Fletcher (a non-natural use, the escape of a dangerous thing and foreseeable damage).17 min answer β
- What duty does an occupier of premises owe to lawful visitors and to trespassers?Occupiers liability: the duty owed to lawful visitors under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957 (the common duty of care, children, skilled visitors and independent contractors) and the duty owed to trespassers under the Occupiers Liability Act 1984.17 min answer β
- What defences can reduce or defeat a tort claim, and what remedies can the claimant obtain?Defences and remedies in tort: the defences of consent (volenti non fit injuria), contributory negligence and necessity, and the remedies of compensatory damages (special and general) and injunctions.16 min answer β
- When is an employer liable for a tort committed by an employee?Vicarious liability: the requirement of a relationship of employment (the tests for employee status), a tort committed by the employee, and that the tort was committed in the course of employment (the close connection test).16 min answer β
The Nature of Law and the English Legal System (Component 1)
Module overview β- How do people gain access to legal advice and representation, and what has happened to public funding?Access to justice and funding: the meaning of access to justice, sources of legal advice and funding (legal aid and LASPO 2012, conditional fee agreements, the advice sector and pro bono), and the barriers to access.15 min answer β
- How do lay magistrates and juries take part in the justice system, and what are the arguments for and against lay involvement?Lay people in the justice system: the selection, role and powers of lay magistrates and of juries, jury qualification and vetting, and the advantages and disadvantages of lay participation.16 min answer β
- What do barristers, solicitors and legal executives do, and how do their roles, training and regulation differ?Legal personnel: the role, training and regulation of barristers, solicitors and chartered legal executives, the work they do, rights of audience, and the regulation of the professions.15 min answer β
- How are civil disputes resolved through the courts, and what alternatives to litigation exist?The civil courts (County Court and High Court and their divisions), the civil appeal routes and the track system, and alternative dispute resolution: negotiation, mediation, conciliation and arbitration.16 min answer β
- How are criminal cases classified, in which courts are they tried, and what are the routes of appeal?The criminal courts: the classification of offences (summary, either-way and indictable), the jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court and the Crown Court, the pre-trial procedure and the criminal appeal routes; the aims of sentencing.16 min answer β
- Who are the judges, how are they appointed, and why must they be independent of government?The judiciary: the types and hierarchy of judges, their appointment and qualifications, judicial independence and the doctrine of the separation of powers, and the role of judges in the courts.16 min answer β
- What is law, how does it differ from morality and rules, and what does the rule of law require of the state?The nature of law: the distinction between legal rules and other rules (morality, ethics and social rules); the rule of law as expounded by Dicey and Bingham, and its place in the English legal system.16 min answer β