With the approval of the Academic Degrees Committee of the State Council in 1998, the second-class discipline of law on environmental and resource conservation was set. With the approval of the Academic Degrees Committee of the State Council in 2010, the first-level master’s program of law was set. The program authorized to grant the master’s degree in law was approved in 2014. The program authorized to grant the professional social work degree was approved in 2017. The college currently has five academic degree programs, including law of environmental and resource conservation, civil and commercial law, constitutional law and administrative law, criminal law and law theory, and three professional degree programs, including master of law (for law graduates), master of law (for non-law graduates) and social work.