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BA Sociology and Economics
About this course
Sociology and economics together offer a powerful lens on the forces that shape social life and economic outcomes. Sociology asks how society is structured, how power operates, and what drives inequality, identity, and collective behaviour. Economics asks how resources are allocated, how markets function, and how individuals and institutions make decisions under constraint. Each discipline illuminates what the other can miss: sociology brings attention to structure, culture, and power where economics might see only rational calculation, while economics brings precision and a concern with mechanisms and incentives to questions that sociology might otherwise treat too abstractly. At the University of Derby, this three-year full-time degree explores key sociological themes alongside applied economic theory, preparing you for a wide range of graduate careers through an approach that is both critical and practically grounded. The programme asks questions about how social justice can be promoted in business, politics, and the public sector, placing theoretical learning in dialogue with real-world concerns. It includes a foundation year, which provides a structured introduction to the key concepts and study skills needed to thrive in higher education, as well as a sandwich year and work placement, giving you substantial professional experience alongside your academic study. Graduates from sociology and economics programmes have a combination of analytical and critical skills that is valued across a wide range of sectors. Public policy, social research, the civil service, local government, the charity sector, journalism, consultancy, financial services, and international development are all common destinations. The ability to understand both quantitative and qualitative evidence, and to situate economic analysis within a broader social and political context, is particularly valued in roles that involve policy design, evaluation, or advocacy. Postgraduate study in sociology, economics, social policy, or public administration is a natural next step for those who wish to develop specialist expertise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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