Criminology and Sociology

BA Jt Hons UCAS Code

Course overview

Learn how to make a difference to society with our BA Criminology and Sociology degree. The two subjects together will give you an understanding of people, society, crime and the criminal justice system. You’ll explore topics that touch on psychology, law, history and politics to explore our social world.

Our staff expertise across criminology, sociology and social policy means we offer a large choice of optional modules in years two and three. You could continue a passion you already have or discover completely new ideas around gender, the criminal justice processes, cults, or cybercrime.

Placements and studying abroad are other options you can take advantage of to grow professionally and personally. It’s this holistic approach to preparing you for the workplace that has put us 2nd in the Russell Group for the number of graduates in sustained employment or further study five years after graduation (LEO data for the tax year 2021/33, published in 2024). 

Teaching and learning

Modules

Core modules

6 modules

Criminology: Understanding Crime and Victimisation

This module lays the foundations for further study in criminology by looking at its development as a discipline. You will consider how crime is defined and counted, and investigate the sources of criminological knowledge.

The main focus is on key theoretical perspectives in criminology, and how they help us to understand and explain crime and victimisation and social reactions to it.


Introduction to the Criminal Justice 'System' in England and Wales

This module seeks to introduce and contextualise the function and processes of the agencies and institutions that operate within the criminal justice system.

The module will encourage you to identify the tensions and inequalities that lead criminologists and criminal justice practitioners to promote reform of the criminal justice system. Summary of the topics to be covered include:

 

  • Theorising criminal justice and punishment: Exploring models of criminal justice and penology
  • Overview of the criminal justice system in England and Wales
  • Key agencies, processes and institutions within the criminal justice system including: police, prosecution, judiciary, sentencing, management of offenders, youth justice and alternatives to custody
  • Criminal justice policy-making process, the role of victims and the politicisation of criminal justice
  • Inequalities and bias within the criminal justice system: race, gender and class
  • International influences of criminal justice-policy making: organised crime and terrorism; European Union; international cases studies influencing reform agenda

Investigating Social Worlds

This module introduces you to the nature of social research through exploration of the fundamental philosophical, methodological and ethical debates on ‘how to think of social research’ and ‘how to do social research’.  

The module includes discussions of the primary features, functions and characteristics of social research, the distinctions between social research and other modes of investigating and producing knowledge about the social world and the steps typically involved in conducting social research. Indicative content also includes methods of data collection and issues of ethics, status, power and reflexivity in social research. 


Social Science Uncovered 1

This module explains what it means to study social science, and how social sciences differ from the natural sciences. It encourages you to understand criminology, sociology, social work and other subjects in the social sciences, including social and public policy, as distinct but often overlapping and intersecting disciplines and fields of study with shared concerns about, and similar approaches to, making sense of the social world.

The module works alongside other introductory modules taken at level one by providing you with the opportunity to develop, practice and demonstrate the range of intellectual and practical skills needed to study social sciences successfully at university level. These skills include:

 

  • finding appropriate sources and avoiding inappropriate ones
  • making and organising notes effectively
  • using the Harvard referencing system correctly
  • asking questions and developing intellectual independence
  • drawing together, analysing and evaluating information from a range of sources
  • making reasoned arguments and challenging assumptions
  • communicating respectfully and effectively with others
  • responding positively to critical feedback
  • accessing using digital technologies and resources 

Social Science Uncovered 2

This module builds on the skills, knowledge and understanding gained in Social Science Uncovered 1. The module will discuss a different social issue or phenomenon each week and explore through the lenses of criminology, sociology, social work or social and public policy. Learning will centre on how social science can help to understand the issue and, where appropriate, address it.

The module uses a problem-based, case-study approach to encourage you to develop an intellectual imagination and to become confident discussing and applying insights from subjects closely related to their own. Subjects will be topical and change from year to year. By way of example, they may include: poverty and the cost-of-living crisis; greener futures and climate activism; ageing populations and social care; the UK asylum system; health and the future of the NHS; racism and misogyny in policing; and how social policy is made and implemented in times of crisis and political turmoil.   

Together with introductory level one modules that cover theoretical, conceptual and methodological aspects of criminology, sociology and social work as distinct subjects and fields of study, this module helps you understand and apply learning about the social sciences more generally through examples of lived experience. 


Living Together: Culture, Power, Change

The first part of the module introduces you to some of the contemporary and historical debates in social sciences in the 21st century.

The social sciences are centrally concerned with the investigation of a changing world and the recent arrival of the internet, globalisation, migration and other features will be investigated. However social science is a discipline with a long historical tradition. Here it is key that you have a working knowledge of Marx, Weber, Durkheim and Du Bois to understand the world of the 19th and early 20th century. The module explores the historical and contemporary relevance of these ideas.

The second part of the course mostly relies upon the social science thinking of the 20th and 21st century. Questions such as the impact of the arrival of the consumer society, the importance of difference and diversity, the role of utopia, the importance of art and social movements, the development of the network and mediated society, issues related to gender identity and sexuality, and our shared ideas about the urban setting and the future are all covered in this part of the course.

Overall, you will be introduced to a range of different perspectives in helping you understand a changing world.


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Entry requirements

3 years full-time

£9,535 per year

Quote marks icon

The degree was a great stepping stone into the real world. In my role I often review complex quantitative and qualitative data and compile relevant material, this is the same as the literature review process when doing a dissertation. My degree also gave me the insight, skills and understanding of legal processes that are used daily in my organisation."

Tobi Omotayo

BA Criminology

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