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Faculty of Law

The Faculty of Law at Maastricht University is a top-quality provider of challenging and rewarding Dutch and European legal education at bachelor’s, master’s and PhD-level. A true pioneer in small-scale teaching and teaching of skills aimed at a broad range of future legal professionals.

The clear focus in research on European and international aspects of the law, Law and tech, and the empirical setting in which the law operates, provides an exceptionally stimulating environment for both students and staff. The Faculty greatly values its open, diverse and inclusive community that makes it a pleasant and rewarding place to work and study.

The UM Faculty of Law offers a wide range of bachelor's and master's programmes. Would you like to know more about our programmes? Download the brochure for more information on the courses, career perspectives and admission requirements of our programmes.

News

IGIR Updates Research Clusters and Organisation

The Institute for Globalization and International Regulation (IGIR), which now also includes several former members of

Faculty of Law alumni are satisfied and perform strongly on the labour market

The latest Maastricht University Graduate Surveys 2025 once again show that our graduates look back positively on their studies.

ITEM starts a new chapter with Martin Unfried as director

As of 15 October 2025, Martin Unfried will become the new Director of the Institute for Transnational and Euregional Cross-Border Coopera

Elvira Loibl Appointed Endowed Professor of Recognition, Dialogue, and Recovery After Intercountry Adoption by the University for Humanistic Studies

  • Researchers

Effective October 1st, Elvira Loibl has been appointed Endowed Professor of Recognition, Dialogue, and Recovery A

Recap: Weekend of Science 2025 (Weekend van de Wetenschap)

During the Weekend of Science 2025 (Weekend van de Wetenschap) on Saturday 4 October, the faculties of Maastricht University (UM) a

Faculty in Focus

Our faculty is always buzzing with ideas, discussions, and events! Across the past period, our students, researchers, and staff have been involved in an impressive range of activities, from helping solve cold cases to organising events on children’s rights, and from exploring legal questions in popular culture to rethinking how we teach law.

This series brings together some of the most remarkable and inspiring stories. Whether in the classroom or outside the faculty's walls — one thing is clear: our community continues to explore, innovate, and make an impact.

Read our Faculty in Focus series

Education

We aim at educating excellent jurists who are well prepared to take up the various roles they will fulfil in their future professional career. Maastricht is a special place to study law. The international classroom, focus on small-scale teaching, staff-student contact and skills are widely praised.

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Research

Our research profile specialises in the role of law in a Europeanising and globalising society. It is implemented in one common faculty research programme and offers space for talented researchers. There is always a close link between teaching and research.

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About Law

The faculty is based in a remarkable building in the centre of Maastricht. It has 3,500 students and 360 staff members.

Take the inside tour

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Agenda / events

Blogs

Overriding Mandatory Rules in International Arbitration: Balancing Business Freedom and State Interests

  • Law

Imagine two companies from different countries enter a business deal. They pick a neutral country’s law to govern their contract and agree to arbitrate any disputes, thinking they can sidestep each other’s national courts. But what if one country’s law absolutely prohibits something in the deal – say, paying bribes, or trading with a sanctioned nation? Laws like these are called overriding mandatory rules, and they can trump the chosen law of the contract. In international commercial arbitration, where private arbitrators (not courts) decide disputes, such must-obey laws pose a unique challenge. How can arbitrators respect these important laws without undermining the freedom of businesses to choose their own rules? This question is at the heart of my research on overriding mandatory rules in international commercial arbitration.

What is coercion?

  • Law

According to classic economic thinking—and to common sense—if two parties agree to a deal, both are made better off, otherwise they would not have agreed. This idea is also reflected in contract law, at least in its basic form, treats consent as the cornerstone of a valid contract. If both sides say ‘yes,’ the law usually upholds the deal.

But matters are not that simple. Consumer protection laws, for instance, recognise situations where one party needs special safeguards. And everyone accepts that consent at gunpoint—think of the mobster line, ‘Your signature, or your brains on the contractis not real consent. The harder question is why coercion invalidates consent, and even what "consent" really means. In my thesis, I address both questions. Contrary to much of the existing scholarship, which treats the distinction between free and coerced consent as a social construct, I argue that the difference is factual and can be identified objectively.

Should Employees Participate in Corporations? A Law and Economics Perspective.

  • Law

When we speak of corporations, we usually think of shareholders and managers: the former provide capital, the latter make decisions. Yet, without the contributions of its employees, no corporation can survive, let alone thrive. In my PhD thesis, I answered the question of how employee participation has been developing and structured over time in China, and what effects it has had on employees and on firm performance. I also compared employee participation in China and Germany. In this blog, I want to focus on the importance of employee participation and what insights China and Germany can provide.

One money security: for an Ivorian legal overhaul to withstand global illicit flows

  • Law

My thesis proposes to analyse in depth the Ivorian framework for combating money laundering, suggesting solutions inspired by international best practices. It calls for action from all stakeholders: public decision-makers, financial institutions, media, civil society, and international organizations, in order to foster collective mobilization around the proposed solutions, for an effective and efficient fight against this scourge with multiple repercussions.

Everyone needs a bank. Including human traffickers.

  • Law

Every October 18, the EU marks its Anti-Trafficking Day, a day dedicated to raising awareness for human trafficking and its impact on victims and societies. In this blog – which draws from our article recently published in the 76th special edition of Cahiers Politiestudies exploring the financial side of crime – we adopt a dual legal-sociological lens to explore how this hidden offense can be made more visible. We make the case for law enforcement and banks to proactively join forces, while highlighting some of the tensions that can arise in such partnerships and the need to address them explicitly if these initiatives are to reach their full potential.

Interactive Campus Tour

Watch the interactive video and take a tour of our faculty. Our student Niklas will tell you all about the faculty's facilities, study areas, historical buildings and teaching spaces and more. Choose your own path and find out whether studying at Maastricht University is right for you.

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