Science students want to read some books on law after class, and what is good and basic.

If you are interested in the legal issues of the present society, I suggest reading some notes or comments of legal persons. For example, "Defense on the Cliff" was written by a lawyer, and there are many interesting cases in it. There is also a legal essay "Rain at the West Window", which is suitable for reading as an essay, each of which is relatively short. There are all best sellers in the bookstore.

If you are interested in the subject of law, as an introductory book to understand the law, it is the Ladder of Law, which is internationally recognized as an introductory book to law. But this book is very thick, very thick. And there are many technical terms, which may not be easy to read. I recommend reading Appreciation of Legal Proverbs of the Power of Rule of Law first, taking legal proverbs as the main line, and then coordinating and explaining each proverb, which is a bit like reading famous sayings and aphorisms. Those inspiring epigrams are worth understanding and memorizing.

The theoretical reading of law can also be said to be popular science reading, which is Montesquieu's On the Spirit of Law. This is a required reading for all law majors, and it is also worth seeing for non-law majors. This is a world classic and I have to read it.

If you are interested in legal theories such as fairness, democracy and freedom, I suggest reading Political Thinking: Some Permanent Problems, which is quite interesting and enlightening.

If you are interested in a certain departmental law, you can read some non-textbook books on various departmental laws. Especially if you have a hobby, you should still prefer reading cases. There are many books on criminal cases and civil cases in the bookstore. You can have a look. In particular, some popular science bestsellers, such as major American cases in the 20th century, are not boring to read, but interesting.

Of course, if you want to know the legal provisions, understand the law or deal with some common legal problems in life, it is enough to read the General Principles of Civil Law, Criminal Law, Labor Law, Marriage Law and so on. For some people around you, it is enough to deal with simple legal disputes.

Besides, science students may be interested in reasoning and detective work. As extracurricular reading materials, they can read books on forensic medicine and detective work. Of course, if you have enough spare time, you can learn formal logic, which is absolutely easy for science students, but it is a compulsory basic course for law majors, and logical reasoning is still very interesting, and it is also included in the civil service exam, so it is no harm to read it.

Finally, I suggest watching more legal programs and professional posts and blogs sent by some lawyers at Tianya, all of which discuss current hot issues ~

I think so much for the time being, I hope it will help you ~