

BSc Anthropology and Sociology with Placements
About this course
Anthropology and sociology together offer one of the most comprehensive lenses through which to understand human life. Anthropology asks fundamental questions about what it means to be human, examining culture, kinship, ritual, belief, and the astonishing diversity of ways people organise their lives across different societies and historical periods. Sociology focuses on the structures, institutions, and inequalities that shape social life closer to home, exploring how class, gender, race, and power operate within and between communities. Studied together, the two disciplines create a rich, cross-cultural perspective on the forces that connect and divide us. On this four-year full-time programme at Brunel University London, you will explore the key theories and methods of both disciplines, learning to move between the fine-grained observation of ethnographic fieldwork and the broader structural analysis of sociological research. You will examine topics such as globalisation, identity, migration, colonialism, inequality, and social change, drawing on both qualitative and quantitative approaches. The title indicates the programme includes placements, meaning you will gain direct professional experience that complements your academic study and helps you apply analytical skills in real organisational settings. You will develop the ability to think critically, to design and carry out research, and to communicate complex ideas clearly in writing and in discussion. These are transferable capacities that serve graduates well across a wide range of fields. The combination of cultural sensitivity, sociological analysis, and practical research competence is particularly valued in organisations working across diverse communities or internationally. Graduates from anthropology and sociology programmes work in areas including social research, public policy, international development, education, healthcare, journalism, the charity and NGO sector, human resources, and management consultancy. The analytical and communicative skills developed are recognised by employers who need people capable of understanding human behaviour and social context. Further study is also a natural route, with many graduates progressing to postgraduate research, social work qualifications, or professional training in law, education, or public health.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 30 respondents (79% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →

