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BA Archaeology and Sociology
About this course
Archaeology and sociology together offer two of the most powerful ways of understanding how human societies work and how they have changed over time. Archaeology investigates the human past through the material evidence that survives in the ground, from flint tools and potsherds to the foundations of buildings and traces of ancient environments, developing a picture of how people lived before writing. Sociology examines contemporary societies through theoretical frameworks and empirical research, asking how social structures, institutions, culture, and inequality shape human experience. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, this part-time programme combines both disciplines in a setting that is itself archaeologically and culturally rich. The Highlands and Islands contains an extraordinary density of prehistoric and historic sites, from Neolithic monuments and Iron Age brochs to Norse settlements and Highland clachans, and studying archaeology in this environment brings a distinctive intimacy between academic study and physical landscape. Sociology developed in this context takes on questions that are alive in Highland and island communities: questions of community, identity, depopulation, cultural sustainability, and the relationship between local and global forces. The part-time mode of study suits students who have work, family, or geographic constraints that make full-time study impractical, and the university's distributed model means you can engage with the programme from locations across the region. Graduates go on to careers in heritage, archaeology, museum curation, community development, social research, education, and the voluntary sector. Further study at postgraduate level in archaeology, anthropology, or sociology is a natural route for those who wish to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (78% response rate)
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