Scholarships

We’re delighted to offer our scholarship for students looking to study law at university in the UK. 

Receive £15,000 per year towards your further education

The scholarships will provide five students with £15,000 per year, to cover the costs of university fees and contribute to living expenses. Recipients will also be given a mentor from the firm, invited to insight days and employment workshops, provided with work experience and guaranteed a place at an assessment centre for a training contract.

In recognition that there are both practical barriers (such as the sheer cost of university education) as well as those which are harder to identify (like not knowing anyone who can share their experiences of working in law), our programme has been designed to address both elements.

Informal meeting

Criteria

To be eligible you must successfully apply for a law degree to commence in September/October 2024 (you do not need to have secured your place prior to your application for the scholarship).

To be considered you must:

  • Be able to demonstrate that you have the academic potential to succeed at university;
  • Be attending, and have attended from aged 11, a state-funded, non-fee-paying school/college; and
  • You must meet one of the following:
    • Be in receipt of, or have previously received or have been eligible for, free school meals, pupil premium, education maintenance allowance and/or 16 to 19 bursary;
    • Have grown up in a household where no parent or guardian attended University;
    • You are, or have been, in local authority care (for a period of 3 months or longer);
    • You are, or have been, a full-time or part-time carer;
    • You came to the UK as a refugee or asylum seeker; or
    • You are attending a state school or college with below average A-Level or Higher point score and/or low rate of progression to higher education.

Applications for our scholarships are open from 2 October 2023 until 28 February 2024.

Who we're looking for

We look for qualities that’ll make you a high-performing law student – possibly even a future trainee solicitor at Stephenson Harwood.

  • The ability to learn and reason; the capacity for knowledge and understanding.
  • To quickly assimilate and master substantial factual or technical information.
  • To use incisive thought to identify the key issues in a problem; to think logically and laterally through a problem; and to produce reasoned solutions.
  • The ability to work to a high standard, and have meticulous attention to detail.
  • Identifies own developmental areas and is willing to take action; responds well to feedback.
  • The ability to take on new and challenging goals, to invest energy readily and maintain the necessary commitment, motivation and energy.
  • To persist even when faced with pressure, set-backs and obstacles.
  • The ability to change approach when required; and the ability to work in a changing environment.

Tips from scholarship awardees

Daisy Faraday and Mir Tasin, two current scholarship holders, share their journey into law, and tips for those who wish to apply.

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"Widening access to the legal profession is something about which I am particularly passionate. I grew up in a rural village in West Wales, in a family where one grandfather had been a miner, and the other a farmer. The progression to higher education is something that was a natural expectation by most of my colleagues, however that is not true for everyone and wasn’t my experience growing up. I was one of ten grandchildren and the first and only one to go to university.  We need more diversity in law, more people who may have thought that a career in law is not for ‘people like them’."

Eifion Morris, Chief Executive Officer

Applying

Find out how to apply for a scholarship

VIDEO

Amir Mahdavi, trainee solicitor

Law, Queen Mary University

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Paulina Corbetis, trainee solicitor

Law, Cambridge University

VIDEO

Manon Sel, trainee solicitor

International Development and European Politics, Leeds University

VIDEO

Geon Sik Kang, trainee solicitor

Law, London School of Economics