

BSc Anthropology and Sociology with Placement Year
About this course
Anthropology and sociology together examine the full range of human social and cultural life, from the micro-level of face-to-face interaction to the macro-level of global economic and political systems, and from the rich diversity of human cultures worldwide to the structural inequalities that shape life chances within and between societies. Anthropology brings the methods of intensive fieldwork, cross-cultural comparison, and careful attention to difference and context; sociology brings a focus on social structure, institutions, power, and the quantitative and qualitative methods used to study society systematically. The combination is particularly powerful for understanding a complex and rapidly changing world. At Brunel University London this four-year programme includes a placement year, which gives you direct professional experience before you graduate and connects your academic development to real organisational or community contexts. You will develop a wide range of practical and analytical skills alongside the theoretical knowledge that both disciplines offer, including ethnographic research, survey methods, discourse analysis, and the ability to synthesise and communicate complex findings clearly. The placement year opens doors to a very wide range of settings, from NGOs and policy organisations to businesses, public sector agencies, and cultural institutions. Graduates of anthropology and sociology work in international development and humanitarian organisations, social research and policy analysis, public sector management, education, community development, journalism and media, human resources and organisational development, charities, and the growing world of data analytics in social and commercial settings. The cross-cultural understanding and qualitative research skills the degree develops are particularly valued in organisations working across different communities and national contexts. Postgraduate study in social anthropology, sociology, international development, social work, public policy, or research methods is a natural next step for those who wish to develop specialist expertise or pursue academic careers.
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