

BSc Animal Welfare Science
About this course
Animal welfare science is the systematic study of how animals experience their lives and what factors affect their physical and psychological wellbeing. It is a discipline rooted in biology, behaviour, and ethics, and it draws on evidence from physiology, neuroscience, veterinary medicine, and the social sciences to ask and answer questions that matter deeply for how humans keep, use, and care for animals. In a world where billions of animals are involved in food production, research, companionship, and conservation, the expertise to assess and improve welfare has never been more important. At the University of Chester, you will study animal welfare science over three years of full-time study. The curriculum takes you from the biological foundations of behaviour and sentience through to the practical assessment of welfare in real-world settings such as farms, zoos, laboratories, and companion animal environments. You will learn to use the tools and frameworks that welfare scientists rely on, including behavioural observation, physiological measurement, and established welfare assessment protocols. The programme also engages with the policy and legislative context, examining how welfare standards are set and enforced and how scientific evidence feeds into regulatory decisions. Ethics runs through the course as a live question, not merely a background concern. The four-year programme includes a year abroad, providing the opportunity to study welfare in a different national context and to build an international perspective on a field that is genuinely global in its reach. Graduates with a degree in animal welfare science are prepared for a range of careers at the intersection of science, policy, and practice. Roles in animal welfare assessment and inspection are a direct application of the degree, and graduates work with bodies such as the RSPCA, the Animal and Plant Health Agency, and international welfare organisations. Research careers in academic institutions and policy bodies are open to those who continue to postgraduate study, including masters programmes and doctorates in animal behaviour, welfare science, or related fields. Further opportunities exist in zoo and wildlife management, veterinary support, advocacy, and the growing private sector of companion animal behaviour and welfare consultancy.
Syllabus & Modules
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