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BA/BSc Criminology and Media
About this course
Criminology and media are disciplines that intersect in powerful ways. Crime, criminal justice, and deviance are among the most intensively reported and dramatised phenomena in contemporary media, from rolling news coverage of high-profile cases to true crime podcasts, documentary series, and fictional portrayals of police and courts. How crime is represented in media shapes public perception, political responses, and the lived experiences of those who are accused, convicted, or victimised. Understanding crime requires understanding how it is mediated, and understanding media requires examining the economic, political, and cultural forces that make crime such a compelling subject. At the University of Derby, this three-year full-time degree explores both dimensions in genuine depth. You will study criminological theory, examining the social, psychological, and structural explanations for crime and deviance, alongside the legal and institutional frameworks of criminal justice. The media strand addresses how social divisions, power structures, and economic forces shape both who gets access to media platforms and how different groups are represented within them. You will analyse crime as both an individual and social phenomenon while developing an acute awareness of how media representations are constructed and what effects they have on public understanding of crime and justice. A sandwich year with work placement gives you direct professional experience in either a criminological or media context, building applied competence alongside academic knowledge. Graduates enter careers across criminology, criminal justice, the media, and the creative industries. Roles in journalism, documentary production, social research, policy analysis, probation, the prison service, youth justice, victim support, and community safety draw on the combined knowledge and skills the degree develops. The ability to analyse both crime and its media representation is particularly valuable in roles that involve public communication about crime and justice, including in broadcasting, the public sector, and advocacy organisations. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in criminology, media studies, journalism, law, or social policy, building specialist expertise for research and senior professional roles.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 120 respondents (69% response rate)
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