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BA Sociology
About this course
Sociology examines the forces that shape social life, asking how power, inequality, culture and institutions structure the way people live, and why social arrangements take the forms they do. It is a discipline that refuses to take the social world for granted, instead treating everyday realities as objects of critical enquiry. In a century defined by rapid and contested change, sociology provides indispensable tools for understanding phenomena as varied as digital culture, climate politics, urban inequality, migration and the transformation of work. At the University of Westminster, this three-year full-time programme engages with a dynamic, twenty-first-century version of the subject, exploring current social issues and debates using the latest research methods. You will study classical and contemporary theory, research methods, social inequalities, culture and identity, and a range of substantive topics that connect sociological thinking to the world beyond the university. The programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad and a work placement, offering substantial professional and international experience. The typical entry tariff is 88 UCAS points, and Westminster's London location gives students access to a diverse, cosmopolitan context that is itself a source of sociological insight. Sociology graduates develop transferable skills in research, analysis, writing and critical thinking that are valued across a wide range of employers. Social research, policy analysis, community development, education, public administration, journalism, human resources, marketing and the charity sector are among the most common graduate career destinations. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, criminology, social work or urban studies, and the analytical training the degree provides is a strong foundation for research degrees. Others enter graduate schemes in the public and private sectors, where the capacity to understand complex social contexts and communicate clearly about them is an asset.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (88% response rate)
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