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BA Criminology with Counselling Skills
About this course
Criminology with counselling skills brings together two disciplines concerned with understanding human behaviour and its social consequences, but from different angles. Criminology examines crime, deviance, and the criminal justice system, asking how crime is defined, who commits it, and whether our responses to it are effective or just. Counselling skills, meanwhile, focus on the individual: on emotional difficulties, relationships, and the kind of supportive communication that helps people process their experiences and develop their understanding of themselves. The combination creates a graduate who can analyse social systems and individual behaviour simultaneously, which is a genuinely valuable perspective for work in criminal justice, social care, and related fields. At the University of Essex, this full-time, three-year BA allows you to explore crime and criminal justice within wider social and psychological contexts. You will examine how societies define and respond to criminal behaviour, considering the role of institutions, inequality, and ideology. Alongside this, you will develop insight into counselling theory, emotional difficulties, and human relationships, equipping you to work supportively with people who have experienced crime, trauma, or other difficulties. The combination is particularly relevant to work in probation, victim support, youth justice, and social care, where analytical and interpersonal skills are both needed. The typical entry tariff is 120 UCAS points. Graduates from criminology with counselling skills are well placed for careers in the criminal justice system, social work, victim support services, mental health and counselling contexts (often with further training), youth justice, community safety, and charitable organisations working with vulnerable people. The analytical depth of the criminology element also supports roles in policy research, government, and public administration. Many graduates pursue postgraduate training in counselling, social work, criminal justice, or related fields, building on the dual grounding the undergraduate degree provides.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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