About us
By offering a wide range of academic programmes in law bringing together researchers, teachers and students from different horizons, SULaw creates strong and stimulating educational and research environments of the highest class.

Building C in Södra Huset, Frescati Campus, where SULaw is located. Photo: Ingmarie Andersson
The Faculty of Law at Stockholm University is the country's largest law faculty, both in terms of numbers of researchers and students. Virtually all fields of law are represented and we are to several well-established research groups.
The Faculty of Law has a single department - the Department of Law, or SULaw. Among others, SULaw runs the country's most sought-after law programme, which has consistently been ranked as one of the best programs in Europe since 1998, as well as several internationally recognized master's programmes.
The department in numbers
Students and education
- ca 5 500 students each year
- 9 programmes at both undergraduate and graduate levels
- over 125 active courses, 30 of which offered in English
Employees
Ca 170 employees work at the department, including:
- ca 30 administrative and technical staff
- over 70 teachers, incl. 33 professors, 35 associate professors and lecturers; nearly 65% of our teachers and researchers hold a doctorate degree
- 35 PhD students
Vision and strategy
From the Faculty of Law's strategies:
The faculty is characterized by a sense of civic engagement that impacts both teaching and research.
It is within the Department of Law that the operational activities specified by the faculty are conducted. The faculty decides, among other things, on programme and course syllabus and takes decisions on the overall strategies that are reflected in the department's activities.
Our history
The Faculty of Law at Stockholm University began its activities in the autumn semester of 1907 as the Department of Political and Legal Sciences at Stockholm University with 7 professorships and 81 enrolled students. The faculty initially had premises in the so-called Lundbergska House in central Stockholm but would successively move to two other addresses in the city centre: first on Kungstensgatan and then Norrtullsgatan 2 in 1927.
In 1959, the Swedish Parliament, or Riksdag, decided that Stockholm University would move out of the inner city to the Frescati area, north of Stockholm. However, it would take more than a decade before the six light-blue high-rise buildings were completed in the early 1970’s and the Faculty of Law could move into its new premises.
Today, the faculty occupies almost the entire building C in Södra huset and is the country's largest law faculty.
Contact
You will find all relevant contact information for the department on the Contact page:
Last updated: 2025-10-16
Source: Department of Law
