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BSc Psychology with Criminology
About this course
Psychology with criminology brings together a scientific understanding of the human mind with a social scientific analysis of crime and its consequences. Psychology examines how people think, feel, perceive, and behave, using experimental and empirical methods to build a systematic account of human mental life. Criminology asks why crime occurs, how it is distributed across society, and how the criminal justice system responds to it, drawing on sociology, law, policy analysis, and psychology itself. The combination is a natural one, since many of the most important questions in criminology, about why individuals offend, how offenders can be rehabilitated, and how witnesses and victims experience criminal justice, are at their heart psychological questions. At the University of the West of England, Bristol this four-year programme is accredited by the British Psychological Society, which means that on graduation you can access the BPS graduate basis for membership and pursue the further training routes into applied psychology. The programme has a strong practical focus, building your professional skills through direct engagement with research methods, case studies, and applied learning. The four-year structure includes a sandwich year and work placement opportunities, giving you professional experience in a psychology or criminal justice context during your studies. Graduates from psychology with criminology programmes work in the probation service, youth offending teams, prisons, police, social work, and victim support organisations. Those who wish to qualify as professional psychologists, for example as forensic, clinical, or educational psychologists, will need to complete further postgraduate training and supervised practice. Many graduates also go on to postgraduate study in psychology, forensic psychology, or criminology. Others move into human resources, social research, policy, and the voluntary sector, where understanding human behaviour and social contexts is consistently valued.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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