

BSc Criminology & Psychology
About this course
Criminology and psychology together address one of the most persistent questions in social science: why do people behave as they do, and what happens when that behaviour crosses into crime? Criminology situates offending within social, structural, and institutional contexts, examining the patterns of crime across different communities, the functioning of justice systems, and the theories that attempt to explain criminal behaviour at a collective level. Psychology brings a complementary focus on the individual, exploring how personality, cognition, emotion, mental health, and life experience shape behaviour and decision-making. At City St George's, University of London, this three-year full-time programme is accredited by the British Psychological Society, providing the Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership that is the essential first step for those wishing to pursue professional training as a psychologist. You will develop both criminological knowledge and rigorous psychological science, building strong research and analytical capabilities that have wide professional value. A sandwich placement year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities are all incorporated into the programme, giving you substantial professional experience and international exposure before you graduate. The typical entry tariff of 120 points reflects the standard expected. You will develop skills in research design, statistical analysis, critical reading of evidence, and professional communication, alongside the theoretical depth in both disciplines that the combined degree provides. Graduates pursue further training in forensic, clinical, counselling, or occupational psychology, each of which leads to professional qualification and chartership. Others move into roles in probation, prison psychology, victim support, social work, youth justice, the police service, and policy. The analytical and interpersonal skills of the combined degree also translate well into human resources, healthcare, research, and the broader public sector. Postgraduate study in forensic psychology, criminology, or social policy is a common route.
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