Course Overview - Criminology: Inequality and Social Justice with Integrated Foundation Year BSc (Hons)
This is a four-year version of our popular BSc (Hons) Criminology course, with an Integrated Foundation Year. Understand the causes of crime and how society responds to it. Investigate current issues, debates and trends surrounding crime and the criminal justice system. Gain real-world experience volunteering in roles within the criminal justice system and graduate as a qualified criminologist.
What makes an act a crime? Who is a criminal? Why do people commit crime? How do they stop offending? What makes someone vulnerable to victimisation?
We recognise Criminology is ...
This is a four-year version of our popular BSc (Hons) Criminology course, with an Integrated Foundation Year. Understand the causes of crime and how society responds to it. Investigate current issues, debates and trends surrounding crime and the criminal justice system. Gain real-world experience volunteering in roles within the criminal justice system and graduate as a qualified criminologist.<br/>What makes an act a crime? Who is a criminal? Why do people commit crime? How do they stop offending? What makes someone vulnerable to victimisation?<br/><br/>We recognise Criminology is a diverse area of study and offer you the opportunity to choose from these new specialist courses:<br/><br/>BSc (Hons) Criminology with Integrated Foundation Year (UCAS code L311)<br/><br/>Youll explore the key issues and debates around crime and victimisation in society today. Youll cover topical and dynamic content, reflecting current issues, policy and practice within the criminal justice system. Youll understand the causes and consequences of crime and how we manage and respond to it as a society. We provide extensive opportunities for you to volunteer and gain career-relevant experience, to ensure you graduate with the transferable skills, broad knowledge-base and critical awareness that studying Criminology provides. Youll take part in continuous training to become a social researcher, which is a valuable extra skill to have for future employment. If you want to work with some of the most vulnerable and dangerous people in society, we will help to equip you with the skills to do it.<br/><br/>BSc (Hons) Criminology: Criminology and Criminal Justice with Integrated Foundation Year (UCAS code L312)<br/><br/>This pathway provides you with a working knowledge of criminological thought and detailed investment in more specific issues, debates, and research regarding the Criminal Justice System (CJS), and processes of justice more generally. Youll develop detailed knowledge and critical awareness of theoretical approaches to and practice-based implementations of criminal justice systems, issues regarding the rights and access/barriers to justice for victims of crime and harm and processes of offender management, governance and rehabilitation.<br/><br/>BSc (Hons) Criminology: Vulnerability and Social Care with Integrated Foundation Year (UCAS code L313)<br/><br/>This pathway will provide you with a strong working knowledge of theory and research on vulnerable populations and practice-based approaches to counselling and safeguarding policies. It emphasises the development of critical awareness and practitioner approaches to social policies aimed at addressing social inequalities and social care, vulnerable populations and victimisation processes within public, domestic and institutional contexts, approaches to safeguarding and accountability and core counselling skills, practices, and help strategies.<br/><br/>BSc (Hons) Criminology: Inequality and Social Justice with Integrated Foundation Year (UCAS code L314)<br/><br/>This pathway specialises in criminological issues which intersect with social inequalities such as gender, sex, sexuality, race and ethnicity. A strong emphasis is placed on social justice, such as persecution, exploitation, and discrimination – issues that, more often than not, escape conventional notions of criminal justice. It emphasises the development of detailed knowledge and critical awareness of theoretical and empirical relationships between power, inequalities, and social change, especially in relation to the impact of globalisation, global and local issues regarding diversity, discrimination and human rights and theories and practices of exploitation, hatred and persecution in relation to issues such as homophobia and sex work.