

BSc Information in Society
About this course
Information in society is a discipline that examines the role of information, data, and knowledge in contemporary life, asking how information is created, organised, accessed, used, and controlled, and what the consequences of these processes are for individuals, institutions, and democratic societies. It draws on information science, library studies, social theory, ethics, and media studies to address questions that have become increasingly urgent in an era of digital abundance: how do we find and evaluate information, who owns and controls data, what are the implications of algorithmic systems for access and equity, and how should information be governed in the public interest? At University College London, this three-year full-time programme benefits from UCL's distinguished tradition in information studies, which stretches back to one of the world's oldest library schools and continues in one of the UK's leading departments for information science research. You will study information theory, information behaviour, knowledge organisation, digital libraries, data management, the politics and ethics of information access, and the history of information systems, developing a critical and analytically rigorous understanding of information as a social and technological phenomenon. The programme is genuinely interdisciplinary, drawing on the humanities, social sciences, and computing to provide a sophisticated framework for thinking about information in the modern world. A typical entry tariff of 168 points reflects the competitive nature of the programme. Graduates of information studies programmes work in libraries, archives, information management, records management, data governance, knowledge management, publishing, technology policy, and the cultural sector. The combination of critical thinking and practical understanding of information systems is valued by employers in the public, private, and voluntary sectors. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in library and information science, data management, digital humanities, or public policy, and the field is increasingly connecting to careers in data ethics, AI governance, and digital public services.
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