Law Essay Competitions
From Learnmore
Feeling like a winner?
There are lots of opportunities to try out your writing expertise throughout the year...sometimes for money (oh and prestige and worldwide fame of course...).
The Andrew Lockley Public Law Essay Competition
Irwin Mitchell run this competition for aspiring public law and human rights solicitors and it is a fantastic opportunity to get your name out there, win a £250 Blackwell's gift card and to develop your legal writing skills.
It is open to law students, graduates, paralegals and trainee solicitors.
Entrants are asked to submit an essay of no more than 1500 words on the following topic:
What key factors should the courts consider and give most weight to when balancing the rights to freedom of expression and assembly of protestors with disruption to other members of the public?
Deadline is: 31st October 2023. Find full details of the competition, including the rules via the Irwin Mitchell website.
vLex International Law & Technology Writing Competition
This annual competition (it has been running since 2018) centres around three new themes each year. For 2024 these are:
- Immigration
- Large language models
- Industrial action
As in previous years, the winner receives a whopping £1500, with additional prizes for runners-up.
Have a look at the vLex Writing Competition page to see the rules, Ts &Cs and the work of winners from the previous competitions. You can also get inspiration on the set themes.
Max number of words is 1000. Deadline is 1st December 2023.
Golding Essay Prize
The Competition Law Association runs an annual competition for any student, trainee solicitor, pupil barrister or trainee patent and trade mark attorney. First prize is £1000.
The 2024 Essay Prize title asked for entrants to address the following title:
As the importance of renewable energy increases, will patents continue to play a central role in protecting those rights or will renewable companies rely on trade secrets and confidential information only?
Look at the competition website for inspiration from previous winning essays. The rules and background for this year's competition can be accessed via the CLA website.
Times Law Awards
The biggest of these law essay competition is The Times Law Award. Last year's competition deadline was mid-Jan and prizes were substantial, with £3,500 for the winner and £2,500 and £1,500 for second and third place. Not bad for a 1000 word essay on a given topic!
Last year's title was:
Should states and private parties be entitled to recover reparations from aggressor states, and if so, how??
You can see the prize-winning essays (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 3 runners-up going all the way back to 1995) on the One Essex Court/Times Law Award website.
We'll update this as soon as this year's competition is announced.
We're very proud of the incredible number of City students and alumni who have performed so well in this competition over the years. We have seen the following successes from them:
GDL student Charlie Colenutt was runner-up in 2020 * BPTC student William Beddows was runner-up in 2019 * BPTC student Katie Ratcliffe (3rd) in 2018 * GDL student Genevieve Woods (1st) in 2017 * Joshua Brown (1st) and Gavin Dingley (2nd) in 2016 * BPTC students George White (1st) and Lara Hassell (3rd) (Lara completed the GDL at City in the previous year) and BPTC alumnus James Beeton (2nd) in 2014 * GDL students Andrew Lomas (1st) and Lara Hassell (2nd) in 2013 * GDL and BPTC alumni James Potts (1st) and GDL student Thomas Coates (2nd) in 2012 * GDL student Anthony Pavlovich (1st) in 2011 * GDL student Anita Davies (1st) in 2010. Anita's winning essay was described by Jack Straw as "an engaging, erudite piece of prose" * GDL student Amy Rogers (1st) in 2006 * GDL student Sarah Love (joint 1st) in 2005 * BVC student James Brilliant (1st) in 2004 * GDL student Mathew Guillick (1st) in 2002 *
The Graham Turnbull Memorial International Human Rights Essay Competition
An annual competition named after Graham Turnbull, an English solicitor who did much to promote respect for human rights. Graham was killed in 1997, working as a human rights monitor on the United Nations Human Rights Mission in Rwanda.
Until 2023, the competition was administered by the Law Society but is now managed by the Graham Turnbull Memorial Fund independently.
The competition is open to law students, trainee solicitors, pupil barristers and all solicitors/barristers within 3 years of admission/call. It asked for essays of no more than 2000 words in length and awards the winner of this prestigious award, £500. The title for the 2023 competition is:
What are the human rights implications of the failure of a state to take action to prevent global temperature rises which threaten the health or lives of their citizens?
Previous winners include Niall Coghlan (2013 competition) and Nick Jones (2019 competition), who were both on the GDL programme at City. You can read the winning entries all the way back to 2010 on the Law Society page for inspiration in the meantime...
Entries should be sent to tfisher@fjg.co.uk prior to the deadline - 5pm on the 20th October 2023. I've put the full rules on the Lawbore blog for you.
Bar Council Law Reform Essay
Sponsored by the Bar Council Scholarship Trust, this competition is open to students and pupils and requires entrants to write a piece of less than 3000 words proposing the case for a law reform which is desirable, practical and useful. Top prize is £4000 which could come in very handy for funding some part of your legal education.
City GDL students have won in previous years: Daisy Ricketts (2011) and Calum Docherty (2010) were both successful. Calum proposed the reform of copyright law in Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: Reforming Fair Dealing in English Copyright Law and Daisy with Strengthening the Rule of Law: Reforming the Scope on Parliamentary Privilege. In 2012 City student Mek Mesfin was runner-up in the CPE category and in 2013 Ross Beaton, a City GDL alumni won the overall prize. You can see all previous winners and read their essays via the Bar Council website.
Phoebe Whitlock won in the GDL category for 2016's competition with an entry entitled Rivalling Silicon Valley: The case for the reform of Software Patents. Take a look at the CityNews story about this. For the 2017 competition, GDL student Clarissa Wigoder won first prize with her essay Spare the rod: Why the law on corporal punishment needs to be reformed, and Daniel Fox was named runner-up with his piece: I hate being idle: Asylum seekers and the right to work. In 2020 BPTC alumnus Oliver Brewis won for his piece: Unravelling the Sleeve of Care: Fair Remuneration for Employer-contracted Sleep. In 2021, GDL student Annika Weis won with her entry: Licence to sanction - Stopping Environmental Crimes through UK Magnitsky legislation. Last year, GDL student Raphael Marshall was first runner-up in the competition.
Take a look at their entries (and other winners back to 2018) via the Bar Council website. The competition information usually comes out in April and the deadline for entries for 2023 is 23rd October at 5pm.
JLD Essay Competition
Open to its members, the Junior Lawyers Network of the Law Society, have an annual competition for those registered with the Solicitors Regulation Authority. This includes LPC students and those qualified and working as paralegals. The deadline is normally around the end of November each year and they generally ask for essays of no more than 2000 words. I can't currently find any information about this year's competition, so have fired off an email to the organisation. Update soon!
Essay titles from previous years include:
Is there a role for the legal profession in environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations?
What’s in a name? Is the title of solicitor still relevant??
How will the rule of law be affected by advances in legal technology?
UKELA Andrew Lees Prize
Named for a former Friends of the Earth Campaign Director (Andrew Lees, a leading environmental campaigner who died unexpectedly in 1994) this prize has been going many years. You can view previous winners on the site and the winner normally receives support for travel and attendance at the UKELA annual conference as well as see your work published in their members' journal.
The deadline for submissions is usually around early April of each year. The 2024 competition is likely to launch in January 2024.
Find out more about the competition and associated rules on the UKELA website, as well as essay winners from past years.
The 2023 competition pivoted around the following statement: 'If we are to meet the challenges of the climate and nature crises, it is essential to strengthen current approaches to environmental governance. Discuss'. You can read the winning entry via the UKELA website.
ARDL Marion Simmons QC Essay Competition
Annual essay competition from the Association of Regulatory and Disciplinary Lawyers. Students are asked to write no more than 1500 words on a topic. The competition asks applicants to submit an essay on a regulatory law or disciplinary law topic of their choice.
First prize winner takes home £2000, second prize winner £1000 and third prize £500. Details of the competition are normally released in February, with a deadline for submission in late April.
Entry is open to all undergraduate and postgraduate students in the UK and a wide range of early practitioners too. You can see full eligibility details via the competition website.
FIDE Essay Prize
The UK Association for European Law also run an essay competition, with the winner securing a bursary to attend the biennial FIDE CONGRESS Conference, which usually takes place in May.
Students are generally asked to write no more than 2000 words (including footnotes) on the topic provided.
Submissions are judged by a panel from the UKAEL committee, who will award the winner registration at the conference in addition to £600 towards accommodation and travel. The winner of this prize in 2018 was William Spence, GDL student at City. In 2014 another City student (BPTC) took the prize, Niall Coghlan. You can read both their essays via the UKAEL website. Niall has had a great year for developing his European Law expertise - he was also part of the team that won the European Human Rights Moot in Strasbourg.
Sadly the competition has been on pause in recent years and will likely not run in 2024.
Future Legal Mind Award
Launched in 2014 by the National Accident Helpline the winner of this competition will receive £1500 towards their career development, as well as gain access to mentoring and a work experience placement.
There are separate awards for undergraduates and postgraduates. The last time the competition ran was 2022. You can find out more about the competition and see the winning entries via the National Accident Helpline competition website. The organisers have confirmed that it will run again in 2024.
The 2015 winner in the postgraduate category was Lukas Hamilton-Eddy (City GDL student). In 2016 the prize was again won by a City GDL student, Tom Phillips. He wowed judges with his essay on the future of legal services for firms and consumers. Another City student, Pavlos Artemios Xagoraris also made the finalists stage. Pavlos is in the first year of his Graduate Entry LLB. Katherine Strange (GDL) was a finalist in 2017. We're overdue another City winner!
Property Bar Association Essay Competition
This competition was launched in November 2015 and asks students each year to write a 1000-word essay, with the winner taking home £1000, a copy of Megarry & Wade AND their essay published in the Estates Gazette.
The question for 2023 was Has equity been taken too far in enforcing informal promises of interests in land?
The question is normally released in November each year and the essay deadline in early January.
Arabella Adams (City GDL) won the 2017 competition and Elijah Granet (City GDL) won first prize in the 2020 competition.
SCL Student Essay Prize
The Society for Computers and Law annual essay competition asks entrants to write a maximum of 2000 words in order to be in with a chance of winning a free place at the annual SCL Conference, publication of your essay in the SCL Computers and Law magazine and £300. The competition honours the memory of the amazing Sir Henry Brooke, a former President of SCL.
The 2021 competition (deadline was in November of that year) asked students to address the following question in fewer than 2500 words:
There is increasing concern that machine learning tools embed bias in their operations and outputs. To what extent does the law currently provide adequate protection from or adequate redress in respect of any such discrimination?
We've contacted the SCL to find out if this competition will run in 2024.
Shamnad Basheer Essay Competition on Intellectual Property Law
This competition was launched in 2020 by SpicyIP, in honour of their founder Professor Shamnad Basheer. Excitingly this competition asks for submissions on anything related to intellectual property rights – the more creative the better. The call generally comes out in May of each year.
The word limit for submissions is 5,000 words (inclusive of footnotes) and the deadline for submissions is June 30, 2020 (23:59 IST).
All submissions and any queries should be e-mailed to submissions@spicyip.com.
The competition is open to students currently enrolled in any LLB program (or its equivalent – meaning students enrolled in J.D. programs can take part) across the world.
We are awaiting information on the 4th annual essay competition but you can see the winners of the 2022 competition and their essays via the SpicyIP website.
UK Centre for Animal Law Essay Competition
The details of the 2024 competition will be released in November 2023.
Last year's competition title was:
Can the UK’s hunting legislation be reformed to ensure practical protection for UK wildlife?.
The inaugral competition was won by City GDL and BVS student Sam Groom. You can see a fantastic video of Sam speaking about the competition on the competition website.
First prize is a £150 book voucher and the chance to get your essay published in the UK Journal of Animal Law.
The Cambridge Centre for Animal Rights Law Essay Competition
The organisers state that the aim of their competition is to:
...encourage students to explore the fascinating questions that animals rights raise, and to discuss these questions in an original piece of writing that may inspire them to engage further with the topic in the future.
No information regarding the 2024 competition yet but in 2023 the question was as follows:
Richard Ryder once wrote: “Since Darwin, scientists have agreed that there is no ‘magical’ essential difference between human and other animals, biologically-speaking. Why then do we make an almost total distinction morally?” Assuming that is correct, how does this affect the arguments for and against animal rights laws?
The winning essay in the university category receives £750. You can read winning essays from the previous years of the competition via the competition website.
Littleton Chambers Sports Law Essay Competition
This annual competition from Littleton Chambers offers young lawyers the chance to get their ideas out to the wider sporting community and various monetary prizes, plus a sports law mini-pupillage. First prize is £1000, second prize £500 and third place receives £250.
The 2023 competition deadline was end of February 2023, so we anticipate a similar one for the 2024 competition. Entrants were asked to submit a piece of work between 1,500 and 2,500 words, on the following title:
Transparency has been prized as foundational to good governance in sport (see, for instance, the International Olympic Committee’s Basic Universal Principles of Good Governance, principle 2). To what extent (if at all) are sport regulators justified in using confidential procedures, such as arbitration, to deal with participant misconduct?
Until we get the info for the 2024 competition, have a look at the information on the 2023 competition pages.
Human Rights Essay Award
The Human Rights Essay Award is an annual competition (sponsored by the Academy on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at Washington College of Law) that seeks to stimulate the production of scholarly work in international human rights law.
The Academy will grant two Awards, one for the best article in English and one for the best article in Spanish. The Award in each case will consist of:
- A full scholarship to the Program of Advanced Studies on Human Rights and Humanitarian Law for either the Diploma or Certificate of Attendance options.
- Travel expenses to and from Washington D.C. (if the competition is not virtual)
- Housing at the university dorms
- Per diem for living expenses
- The best articles may also be published in the American University International Law Review
It is open to all lawyers around the world regardless of their nationality, but participants must already have a law degree Juris Doctor, (J.D.), Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) or equivalent by the submission due date to be eligible. They must also have a demonstrated experience or interest in international human rights law.
The 2022 topic was Climate Change and Human Rights: Impacts, Responsibilities, and Opportunities and the deadline was the end of January.
We are awaiting information on the 2024 competition.
FSLA Essay Competition
The Financial Services Lawyers Association runs an annual essay competition, normally with a deadline of early October each year. First prize is a generous £1500 and a legal internship at the FCA.
The 2023 competition title is Can the risks and opportunities of AI in financial services be managed by fine-tuning existing regulation, or is a new approach required? You need to get your entries in by midnight on 6th October 2023.
Look at the FSLA website for full details/rules. Note that membership of the FSLA is free to students!
ITSA Essay Competition
Open to students members of the Inner Temple, the 2023 competition asks entrants for essays of 2500 words maximum (including refs) on the following topic:
Is the Cab Rank Rule now redundant at the self-employed Bar?
Deadline is 4pm on Monday 6th November 2023 and first prize is £150 and publication of your essay in the Inner Temple Yearbook. Look at the competition website for full rules of the competition.