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95% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Crime, Justice and Society
About this course
Crime, justice and society is an interdisciplinary degree that examines criminal behaviour, the criminal justice system, and the social contexts that shape both from multiple analytical perspectives. It asks how crime is defined and measured, who commits it and why, who is most likely to be victimised, and how the institutions of policing, prosecution, courts, and corrections actually operate in practice. It also situates these questions within broader social structures, examining how inequality, deprivation, race, gender, and power shape the experience of crime and justice for different groups in society. At the University of Suffolk you will study this three-year full-time degree. The programme draws on sociology, criminology, psychology, law, and social policy to give you a genuinely multidisciplinary understanding of crime and justice, moving between theory and evidence, between the individual and the social, and between descriptive and normative questions about how the criminal justice system should work and what it actually achieves. You will engage with criminological theory from classical deterrence to contemporary feminist and critical approaches, and you will develop research skills in both quantitative and qualitative traditions, enabling you to evaluate evidence and design your own empirical enquiries. The social and community focus of the University of Suffolk's approach is evident throughout the programme. Graduates from crime, justice and society programmes go on to work in the police, probation, youth offending services, social work, the prison service, the voluntary sector, victim support, community development, and policy research. The analytical and communication skills developed during the degree are also valued in local government, the civil service, journalism, and human rights organisations. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in criminology, social policy, law, or social work, either to deepen their academic expertise or to qualify for specific professional roles within the justice system.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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