Research at The Faculty of Law
The faculty has strong research environments in private law. Research areas of priority include competition law and EU law, as well as intellectual property law.
Central to our pursuits is the focus on law and its interaction with modern legislation and regulation – also on an international level.
The faculty is organised in research groups, and has some important academic programmes that operate outside the more formally constituted research groups.
Our research policy encourages collaborative research, teamwork and interdiciplinary work, and the faculty coordinates an interdisciplinary University research programme on human rights, democracy, development, globalisation and citizenship.
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Research profile
The Law Faculty has a dynamic and modern research environment with an increasing international representation.
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Criminal Law Theory - A New Norwegian Approach
Criminal Law Theory – A New Norwegian Approach is an attempt to move the Norwegian criminal law and criminal law science forwards in a more theoretical direction than what has been the traditional approach.