

BSc Criminology
About this course
Criminology is the study of crime as a social phenomenon: why it occurs, who commits it, who is most affected by it, and how society responds through law, policing, courts, prisons, and rehabilitation. It is a discipline that sits at the intersection of sociology, psychology, law, and policy, and it demands both analytical rigour and a willingness to question assumptions about what counts as crime, who is labelled a criminal, and whether the responses we have developed actually work. At Aston University, this four-year, full-time programme takes you from foundational theories of crime and justice through to advanced engagement with contemporary debates about policing, sentencing, restorative justice, organised crime, cybercrime, and the social and structural factors that drive offending. You will develop strong skills in research methods, both quantitative analysis of crime statistics and qualitative work with communities and case studies. Throughout the degree you will be encouraged to think critically about the relationship between power, law, and social inequality, and to evaluate competing explanations and policy responses with appropriate scepticism. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study criminology in an international context and to see how different societies construct and respond to crime. That comparative perspective is genuinely valuable in a discipline where so much depends on specific legal, cultural, and political contexts. Graduates from criminology programmes work in probation, the prison service, youth justice, victim support, social work, policing, and the voluntary sector. The research and analytical skills you develop are also valued in policy, journalism, law, and public administration. Many graduates pursue further study in criminology, criminal justice, social work, or law, particularly those interested in specialising in forensic work, penal policy, or research.
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