

High Drop-out Rate Alert
25% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Sociology and Criminology
About this course
Sociology and criminology is a pairing that makes particularly good sense, because understanding crime and the social responses to it requires precisely the analytical tools that sociology provides. Sociology examines the structures, institutions, and cultural forces that shape human societies, asking why inequalities persist, how social norms are formed and enforced, how class, race, gender, and age shape life chances, and how social change happens. Criminology applies these questions to crime and deviance specifically, asking who defines what counts as criminal, how crime is distributed across social groups, what causes criminal behaviour, and how the criminal justice system, including police, courts, and prisons, responds to crime in ways that reflect and reproduce social inequalities. At Leeds Beckett University, this three-year full-time degree develops both disciplines across a programme that includes a year abroad. You will engage with the social issues that define modern life, from crime, justice, and inequality to identity, media, power, and social change, examining how societies respond to crime and deviance while uncovering the broader social forces that shape people's opportunities, experiences, and life chances. The year abroad provides the opportunity to engage with sociological and criminological questions from the perspective of another national and academic context, developing the comparative understanding that both disciplines benefit from. Graduates enter careers across social research, policy analysis, criminal justice, education, the voluntary sector, and the public sector more broadly. Roles in probation, youth justice, community development, social work, housing, health promotion, advocacy, and journalism all draw on the combined knowledge and analytical skills the degree develops. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in sociology, criminology, social policy, social work, or law, building specialist expertise for research, policy, or senior professional roles. The capacity to understand social structures critically and to communicate clearly about complex social phenomena is valued by employers across many professional fields.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (67% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →

