

BSc Sociology with a Foundation Year
About this course
Sociology is the discipline that asks why the world works the way it does. It examines the structures, institutions, and processes that shape human life collectively, from the ways that class, race, gender, and culture organise opportunity and inequality to the forces that drive political change, economic transformation, and social conflict. It is a subject that takes the most pressing questions of our time seriously: climate change and migration, the rise of populist movements, the changing nature of work, and the deep tensions generated by rapid social change are all central concerns of contemporary sociological inquiry. At Swansea University, this four-year full-time programme includes an integrated foundation year, which prepares you for the demands of degree-level study before you move into the core sociology curriculum. You will engage with the major theoretical traditions in sociology, learning how different thinkers have understood society, power, and social change, and develop the research skills to investigate social questions for yourself. The programme connects sociological analysis to the concrete challenges the world faces today, ensuring that your academic learning is grounded in real issues with real consequences. You will study how ecological instability, economic dislocation, political polarisation, and social precarity are reshaping societies, and develop the analytical vocabulary to understand and explain these dynamics. Swansea's location and the department's engagement with Welsh society provide a distinctive context for studying social processes, and the university's commitment to employability ensures the programme is designed to develop not just knowledge but transferable professional skills. Graduates go on to careers in social research, policy analysis, public services, community development, journalism, education, social work, NGOs, and the voluntary sector. Sociology also provides a strong foundation for postgraduate study in social research, public policy, criminology, or related fields. The analytical and interpretive skills the degree develops are valued in any context where understanding human behaviour and social structures matters.
Syllabus & Modules
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