

BSc Criminology and Social Policy
About this course
Criminology and social policy is a combination that examines both the nature and causes of crime and the social and institutional responses to the problems that affect people's lives and life chances. Criminology approaches crime and deviance through the lenses of sociology, psychology, law, and political theory, asking why people commit crimes, how crime is defined and experienced, and how societies manage, punish, or rehabilitate those who break the law. Social policy extends this to the broader range of social challenges that governments and communities must address, including poverty, inequality, housing, health, education, and welfare, examining how policies are made, implemented, and evaluated. At Swansea, this four-year degree combines two rapidly developing subject areas that each have an enormous influence on contemporary life, exploring how they intersect and illuminate each other. You will study criminological theory, the sociology of crime, policing and criminal justice, victimology, penology, and the comparative study of criminal justice systems alongside social policy theory, welfare state analysis, social inequality, health policy, and housing and community policy. The combination allows you to see criminal justice as itself a form of social policy, and to understand how broader social conditions shape patterns of crime and the character of the policy responses to it. Both disciplines are grounded in evidence and oriented towards the real world, developing skills in research, analysis, and policy thinking that are directly applicable in professional contexts. Graduates of criminology and social policy degrees move into careers in probation, social work, the prison service, youth justice, housing, health promotion, and policy analysis and development. The combination of criminological and social policy knowledge is particularly relevant in the public and third sectors, where many of the most complex social challenges require an integrated understanding of crime, welfare, and the conditions that shape both. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in criminology, social policy, social work, or public administration, while others enter professional training programmes in social work or related fields.
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