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BA Sociology and Law
About this course
Sociology and law is a combination that explores the formal rules of social life and the social forces that shape, sustain, and sometimes undermine those rules. Law provides the institutional framework through which rights are defined, obligations enforced, and disputes resolved. Sociology provides the analytical tools to ask why legal systems look the way they do, whose interests they serve, how they interact with inequality and power, and what the limits of law as an instrument of social change actually are. At the University of Gloucestershire, the BA Sociology and Law is a three-year full-time programme that develops both sets of skills in an integrated and mutually reinforcing way. The sociology strand develops your understanding of how social structures, inequalities, and institutions shape collective life. You will engage with theories of class, race, gender, and power, and with the empirical methods that sociologists use to investigate social phenomena. The relationship between law and social order, social change, and social inequality is a thread that runs through the curriculum. The law strand covers the foundational areas of English law, including contract, tort, criminal law, and constitutional and administrative law, alongside areas where the two disciplines connect most directly: criminal justice, family law, discrimination law, and the sociology of punishment and social control. The combination develops a graduate who can analyse legal questions with social awareness and social questions with legal precision. Graduates of sociology and law programmes move into careers in the legal profession, social research, the civil service, social work, criminal justice, community development, journalism, policy, and the charitable sector. The analytical and written communication skills the combination develops are valued across a wide range of roles. Some graduates go on to the Legal Practice Course or Solicitors Qualifying Examination if they wish to qualify as solicitors, while others pursue careers that draw more directly on sociological knowledge. Postgraduate study in sociology, law, criminology, or social policy is another route that some graduates take. The degree provides a strong foundation for any career that requires understanding how legal and social systems interact in practice.
Syllabus & Modules
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