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BA Criminology and Sociology
About this course
Criminology asks why crime happens, how societies define and respond to it, and whether criminal justice systems achieve what they claim to. Sociology provides the broader tools to understand social structures, inequalities, institutions, and the forces that shape human behaviour. Studied together, these disciplines offer a particularly powerful way to examine questions that matter deeply to public life: why do crime rates vary across communities, how do race, class, and gender intersect with the criminal justice system, what works in preventing harm, and how do social norms shape what gets defined as deviant in the first place. At Keele you will draw on a wide range of theories and research methods to investigate crime, law, and social order. You will study classical and contemporary criminological thought alongside sociological perspectives on inequality, power, and social change. The programme prepares you to engage not just with academic debates but with real communities and organisations. You will have the opportunity to undertake a placement year and a year abroad, alongside work placement experience integrated into the degree. These opportunities mean you can connect the ideas you study with professional practice in criminal justice, social services, and the voluntary sector. You will develop strong skills in critical analysis, qualitative and quantitative research, written and oral communication, and the ability to engage thoughtfully with complex social problems. Keele's approach emphasises becoming an active social scientist rather than a passive learner, and community engagement is a genuine part of the experience. Graduates go on to work in the police, probation, prison service, social work, community organisations, youth justice, policy, and the charity sector. Many pursue postgraduate study in criminology, sociology, social policy, law, or social work, and the combination of analytical and research skills the degree develops is valued across a wide range of public and third-sector careers.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 80 respondents (75% response rate)
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