Consumers & Innovation
Master Technology Law and Innovation
Intellectual Property & Innovation
Law in Practice
Seminar: Researching Current Challenges to the European Union
The Law of Sustainable Technology
Competition Law and Market Regulation
Data Driven Innovation
Cybersecurity in International and EU Law
Master Thesis
Competition Law and Market Regulation
This course offers an in-depth introduction to EU competition law and market regulation, with particular attention to their economic foundations and their practical application in legal practice. Students will examine the main pillars of competition law, including restrictive agreements, abuse of dominance, merger control, state aid, and state intervention in the market, as well as the role of enforcement and judicial review. A distinctive feature of the course is its attention to the external effects of EU competition law and market regulation on parties outside the European Union. Students will explore how EU rules shape the behaviour of companies, public authorities, and non-EU market actors in an increasingly interconnected economy. Through interactive lectures and Socratic discussion, students will strengthen their ability to analyse competition problems, choose effective legal strategies, and formulate well-reasoned legal arguments and proposals for reform.it stimulates.
Seminar: Researching Current Challenges to the European Union
This trseminar offers students the opportunity to deepen their research knowledge and academic writing skills through the lens of current technology-related legal issues. It explores contemporary topics at the intersection of law and technology while strengthening core academic skills, including research design, legal writing, peer feedback, and oral presentation. The best papers get the opportunity to be presented in academic settings.
Data Driven Innovation
Finding a balance between rights of individuals and economic interests of States and companies seems to be the defining line in the current legal landscape on Data Driven Innovation in the EU. Our students presented their contribution to the legal and doctrinal debate in a two-day workshop. The topics discussed covered current areas of debate as for example: the Digital Omnibus proposal or the use of AI in healthcare. Some of their findings will be published in a book format.
Law in Action: Consumer Protection Through Technology and Practice
The course explores how emerging technologies such as AI, robotics, digital finance, IoT and neurotechnology reshape consumer rights, business practices and regulation. It combines interactive lectures with hands-on game-based activities, so students do not only learn doctrine but also test it through cases, trivia, workshops, and collaborative exercises.
The images illustrate two examples from the 2024–2025 cohort: the ‘Liability Trivia’ contest and a seminar on contracts in the digital era.
Master Thesis
Decide which thesis start moment fits you. Make sure your topic connects to your programme/track and that your semester
Pick your direction + plan your timing
Because the thesis process is organised as a course, you must enrol in the semester before you start your actual research.
Enrol early (it’s a course)
Enrolment matters because you will receive a grade and you must follow the set thesis timeline and deadlines.
Use the Faculty’s Master’s thesis Brightspace page (automatic access) and the Thesis Guide.
Complete the compulsory preparation components
Identify a (societal) problem, turn it into an academic legal research question + sub-questions, choose and justify a method, and map the key sources/data you’ll use.
Submit a research plan → get a supervisor
Conduct independent research within the timeframe, write a well-structured thesis with proper referencing, process supervisor feedback, and submit the final version by the deadline.
Research, write, revise, and defend
Masterclass in legal-technology challenges
You Are Hired! is a practice-based simulation game that serves as one of the options within Law in Practice. Students can choose the simulation to gain hands-on professional experience. In the game, students work in teams as “consultants” advising real stakeholders (e.g., Microsoft, Deloitte, the Dutch DPA, RDW) on technology-related legal challenges. The simulation strengthens key skills needed for contemporary legal work like: legal research in emerging regulatory fields, strategic communication, teamwork, and translating legal analysis into actionable advice. The game is supported by iterative feedback from peers, professionals, and instructors.
More info
Cybersecurity Lab for Lawyers
Law Students get hands-on with Digital Evidence in Pioneering Cybersecurity Lab.
Our students participated in the Cybersecurity Lab for Lawyers. The lab aims to be a permanent Cybersecurity exercise that develops students’ practical skills and understanding of digital evidence as well as professional specialization for civil and criminal litigations.
IP and innovation
Is an advanced course on the role of intellectual property law in both fostering and hampering innovation and creativity. Through this course students examine concrete case studies coming from the IP world in order to consider if the existing IP system still produces the societal benefits it is meant to. The Moot Court Simulation: Participants are challenged to apply their theoretical knowledge to the theme of copyright law and generative AI.
LoST
The Law of Sustainable Technology is where law meets innovation… and asks, “Cool—now who’s responsible when this goes wrong, and how do we make it sustainable?” We’ll unpack real-world tech dilemmas (from data ecosystems and waste to greenwashing and AI), stress test the legal tools that are supposed to keep society and the planet safe, and debate whether they actually work. Expect interactive sessions, sharp examples, and plenty of critical reflection—then you will bring it all together in a poster presentation, where you defend your own sustainability & regulation argument in front of your peers.
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Transcript
Consumers & Innovation
Master Technology Law and Innovation
Intellectual Property & Innovation
Law in Practice
Seminar: Researching Current Challenges to the European Union
The Law of Sustainable Technology
Competition Law and Market Regulation
Data Driven Innovation
Cybersecurity in International and EU Law
Master Thesis
Competition Law and Market Regulation
This course offers an in-depth introduction to EU competition law and market regulation, with particular attention to their economic foundations and their practical application in legal practice. Students will examine the main pillars of competition law, including restrictive agreements, abuse of dominance, merger control, state aid, and state intervention in the market, as well as the role of enforcement and judicial review. A distinctive feature of the course is its attention to the external effects of EU competition law and market regulation on parties outside the European Union. Students will explore how EU rules shape the behaviour of companies, public authorities, and non-EU market actors in an increasingly interconnected economy. Through interactive lectures and Socratic discussion, students will strengthen their ability to analyse competition problems, choose effective legal strategies, and formulate well-reasoned legal arguments and proposals for reform.it stimulates.
Seminar: Researching Current Challenges to the European Union
This trseminar offers students the opportunity to deepen their research knowledge and academic writing skills through the lens of current technology-related legal issues. It explores contemporary topics at the intersection of law and technology while strengthening core academic skills, including research design, legal writing, peer feedback, and oral presentation. The best papers get the opportunity to be presented in academic settings.
Data Driven Innovation
Finding a balance between rights of individuals and economic interests of States and companies seems to be the defining line in the current legal landscape on Data Driven Innovation in the EU. Our students presented their contribution to the legal and doctrinal debate in a two-day workshop. The topics discussed covered current areas of debate as for example: the Digital Omnibus proposal or the use of AI in healthcare. Some of their findings will be published in a book format.
Law in Action: Consumer Protection Through Technology and Practice
The course explores how emerging technologies such as AI, robotics, digital finance, IoT and neurotechnology reshape consumer rights, business practices and regulation. It combines interactive lectures with hands-on game-based activities, so students do not only learn doctrine but also test it through cases, trivia, workshops, and collaborative exercises.
The images illustrate two examples from the 2024–2025 cohort: the ‘Liability Trivia’ contest and a seminar on contracts in the digital era.
Master Thesis
Decide which thesis start moment fits you. Make sure your topic connects to your programme/track and that your semester
Pick your direction + plan your timing
Because the thesis process is organised as a course, you must enrol in the semester before you start your actual research.
Enrol early (it’s a course)
Enrolment matters because you will receive a grade and you must follow the set thesis timeline and deadlines.
Use the Faculty’s Master’s thesis Brightspace page (automatic access) and the Thesis Guide.
Complete the compulsory preparation components
Identify a (societal) problem, turn it into an academic legal research question + sub-questions, choose and justify a method, and map the key sources/data you’ll use.
Submit a research plan → get a supervisor
Conduct independent research within the timeframe, write a well-structured thesis with proper referencing, process supervisor feedback, and submit the final version by the deadline.
Research, write, revise, and defend
Masterclass in legal-technology challenges
You Are Hired! is a practice-based simulation game that serves as one of the options within Law in Practice. Students can choose the simulation to gain hands-on professional experience. In the game, students work in teams as “consultants” advising real stakeholders (e.g., Microsoft, Deloitte, the Dutch DPA, RDW) on technology-related legal challenges. The simulation strengthens key skills needed for contemporary legal work like: legal research in emerging regulatory fields, strategic communication, teamwork, and translating legal analysis into actionable advice. The game is supported by iterative feedback from peers, professionals, and instructors.
More info
Cybersecurity Lab for Lawyers
Law Students get hands-on with Digital Evidence in Pioneering Cybersecurity Lab. Our students participated in the Cybersecurity Lab for Lawyers. The lab aims to be a permanent Cybersecurity exercise that develops students’ practical skills and understanding of digital evidence as well as professional specialization for civil and criminal litigations.
IP and innovation
Is an advanced course on the role of intellectual property law in both fostering and hampering innovation and creativity. Through this course students examine concrete case studies coming from the IP world in order to consider if the existing IP system still produces the societal benefits it is meant to. The Moot Court Simulation: Participants are challenged to apply their theoretical knowledge to the theme of copyright law and generative AI.
LoST
The Law of Sustainable Technology is where law meets innovation… and asks, “Cool—now who’s responsible when this goes wrong, and how do we make it sustainable?” We’ll unpack real-world tech dilemmas (from data ecosystems and waste to greenwashing and AI), stress test the legal tools that are supposed to keep society and the planet safe, and debate whether they actually work. Expect interactive sessions, sharp examples, and plenty of critical reflection—then you will bring it all together in a poster presentation, where you defend your own sustainability & regulation argument in front of your peers.