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How should I organise chapters in a law dissertation?

  • Writer: Michael Owen
    Michael Owen
  • Aug 11
  • 1 min read
Organisational flow in legal dissertations.

At O'Connor PhD Law Writers, we understand the importance of clear and logical law dissertation structure to achieve academic success. A structured dissertation generally begins with an introductory chapter that lays out your research question, aims of the project and its significance. This is then followed by an extensive literature review that provides context and situates your work within the scholarship. The methodology chapter is where you explain your research strategy, data sources and ethical considerations. The main body usually consists of between two and four analytical chapters where you present an argument, case studies and critical analysis. The final chapter, a necessary requirement of any dissertation despite their generally long form, presents your conclusions and summarises findings, considers limitations of the project and presents recommendations.


We know that academics can struggle with the flow between chapters, or are unsure of how much detail is appropriate in each section. If you're having some of these issues with your dissertation, or you want advice about other aspects of your dissertation, our specially trained team is available to provide law essay help dissertation services which include guidance! O'Connor PHD Law Writers has years of experience in academic legal writing and our members understand how to structure your work to provide clarity and coherence of thought, meet academic standards, and impress examiners.

 
 
 

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