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BA Archaeology and Criminology
About this course
Archaeology and criminology is an unusual but thought-provoking combination that brings together two disciplines concerned with evidence, investigation, and the social production of meaning. Archaeology is the study of human societies through their material remains: objects, sites, buildings, and landscapes that survive from the past and that allow us to reconstruct how people lived, what they valued, and how they organised their worlds. Criminology examines crime, deviance, and social control in the present, asking why certain acts become criminal, how justice is understood and administered, and what the institutions of law enforcement and punishment achieve. At the University of the Highlands and Islands you will study this four-year programme, developing expertise in both disciplines through a curriculum that takes seriously the distinctive methods and concerns of each. Your archaeology will develop your skills in fieldwork, material culture analysis, site interpretation, and the theoretical frameworks that archaeologists use to understand the past. Your criminology will introduce you to the sociology and psychology of crime, criminal justice policy, policing, victimology, and the critical examination of how responses to crime are shaped by power and inequality. Both disciplines train you to evaluate evidence carefully, to construct arguments from incomplete information, and to think critically about the assumptions that underlie interpretation. Graduates with this combination find their skills applicable in a range of careers. Heritage, archaeology, and cultural resource management are natural destinations for the archaeological component, while the criminology provides pathways into policing, the criminal justice system, social work, community development, and policy research. The research and analytical skills both disciplines develop are valued across the public and voluntary sectors. Postgraduate study in archaeology, criminology, forensic archaeology, heritage management, or social science is a natural continuation for those who wish to develop a specialism.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (63% response rate)
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