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BA Criminology
About this course
Criminology is the scientific and social study of crime, its causes, its consequences, and the systems that societies build to respond to it. It is an inherently interdisciplinary field, drawing on sociology, psychology, law, philosophy, and public policy to understand why people commit crimes, how criminal behaviour is distributed across populations, and how criminal justice institutions work and sometimes fail. As a discipline it is both empirically rigorous and ethically engaged, asking not only how things are but how they should be. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, studying criminology part time gives you the flexibility to engage with the subject at a pace that suits your other commitments, taking course units progressively rather than all at once. The part-time structure allows you to build your knowledge of criminal justice systems, theories of crime and deviance, policing, courts, prisons, and victim experience, alongside the research methods you will need to evaluate evidence critically. The Highlands and Islands context also provides a distinctive perspective on crime and justice in rural and island communities, which differ in significant ways from the urban environments that much criminology has historically focused on. Graduates from criminology programmes pursue careers in the criminal justice system, in probation, youth justice, the prison service, police services, victim support organisations, and social work. Others move into research, policy, local government, and the voluntary sector, where the analytical and ethical thinking the discipline develops is widely valued. Postgraduate study in criminology, criminal justice, social policy, or law is a natural route for those who wish to specialise or pursue academic research. The breadth of the discipline's concerns means that criminology graduates are genuinely versatile, with skills that transfer across public sector and third sector settings.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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