Skip to content
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
Bachelor German Law & Economics

Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECTCriminal Law

Bachelor of Arts (B.A.)

About the Program

This Criminal Law program focuses on understanding the German legal system with a specialization in criminal law. Students learn about different offences, cases, and legal texts related to prosecution and punishment. The program helps develop analytical thinking skills through solving legal cases. As a minor subject in a multi-subject bachelor's program, it provides basic legal knowledge while focusing on criminal law. The program includes modules on Criminal Law (General and Special Parts), Methodology of Criminal Casework, Fundamentals of Criminal Procedure, and practical exercises.
Show the original English text
This Criminal Law program focuses on understanding the German legal system with a specialization in criminal law. Students learn about different offences, cases, and legal texts related to prosecution and punishment. The program helps develop analytical thinking skills through solving legal cases. As a minor subject in a multi-subject bachelor's program, it provides basic legal knowledge while focusing on criminal law. The program includes modules on Criminal Law (General and Special Parts), Methodology of Criminal Casework, Fundamentals of Criminal Procedure, and practical exercises.

General Requirements

Specific requirements for this program are not in our database yet. The following are typical for this degree and language in Germany — always verify the exact requirements on the program's official page.

Academic qualification

A recognised higher-education entrance qualification (Abitur or equivalent). International applicants may need recognition via Anabin and, if not directly eligible, a Studienkolleg + assessment exam (Feststellungsprüfung).

Language

German at C1 level (DSH-2, TestDaF TDN 4, Goethe-Zertifikat C1, or telc C1 Hochschule).

Typical documents

  • Recognised diploma and transcript (certified translations)
  • Language certificate
  • Passport and passport photo
  • Tabular CV (Lebenslauf)
  • Letter of motivation (for many programs)
  • Application via uni-assist / VPD (for most international applicants)

Which Professions Does This Program Open Up?

Related profession searches from Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BERUFENET) data:

Explore all professions →

Subjects / Topic Areas

Criminal Law

Similar Programs

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers about Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECT at Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Is Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECT at Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena taught in German or English?

This Bachelor programme is taught in German. Make sure to check the language requirements (e.g. TestDaF, DSH, IELTS or TOEFL) before applying.

How much does the Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECT programme cost?

No tuition fee (only semester contribution). International students should also budget around 800–1000 EUR/month for living costs in Germany.

What are the admission requirements for Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECT at Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena?

Typical requirements include: a recognised secondary/undergraduate degree, proof of language proficiency (German), and (for non-EU applicants) a uni-assist application plus financial proof (Sperrkonto ~11.904 EUR/year).

When is the application deadline?

Application deadlines vary: winter semester usually closes on 15 July, summer semester on 15 January. Always confirm the exact deadline on the official university website.

Can I work in Germany while studying Criminal Law BACHELOR OF ARTS, MINOR IN A MULTI-SUBJECT?

Yes. International students may work up to 140 full days / 280 half days per year without additional permission. After graduation you can apply for an 18-month job-seeker permit.

How do I apply to Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena — directly or via uni-assist?

Most German universities accept international applications through uni-assist for document verification. Some unis accept direct applications — check the programme page on the official site.

Get the weekly Germany guide in your inbox

New blog posts, application deadlines, scholarship announcements. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Weekly Germany guide — 1–2 emails/week, no spam.

Weekly Germany guide delivered to your inbox

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.