

BA Sociology
About this course
Sociology is the systematic study of how human societies are organised, how people within them are shaped by structures they often cannot see, and how inequality, identity and power reproduce themselves across generations. It examines institutions from families and schools to governments, media and markets, asking not just how they function but whose interests they serve and who they leave behind. It is a discipline that demands both rigorous analysis and genuine moral seriousness, because its subject matter is the conditions of real people's lives. At the University of Lincoln, this three-year full-time degree gives you the conceptual and methodological tools to investigate the social world in a principled and critical way. You will engage with the founding ideas of the discipline alongside contemporary debates about race, gender, class, globalisation, digital culture and the environment. The programme includes a sandwich year and work placement opportunities, giving you the chance to apply sociological thinking in professional settings, whether in policy organisations, the third sector, research consultancies, public services or community projects. A year abroad is also available, allowing you to encounter different social formations and educational environments that will deepen your comparative understanding of how societies differ and why. Typical entry is around 104 UCAS tariff points. The analytical skills sociology builds, close reading of evidence, understanding of complex systems, capacity to analyse power and communicate findings clearly, are relevant across virtually every sector. Common graduate destinations include social research, public policy, health and social care, education, journalism, law, the civil service, housing, community development and the voluntary sector. Many graduates also pursue postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, criminology, social work or public administration, deepening their analytical expertise or qualifying for specialist professional roles.
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