

BA Sociology
About this course
Sociology is the scientific study of society: the structures, institutions, and processes through which human beings organise their collective life, and the forces that produce inequality, solidarity, conflict, and change. It asks why some people have more power and resources than others, how gender, race, class, and age shape life chances, how social institutions such as the family, the school, and the state reproduce themselves over time, and what happens when those institutions are challenged or transformed. Sociology is at once a theoretical discipline, developing conceptual tools for understanding social life, and an empirical one, using qualitative and quantitative methods to investigate how societies actually work. At the University of Bradford, this programme includes a foundation year, giving you a thorough introduction to the methods of social science and the key questions of sociology before moving into the full degree. Bradford has a longstanding commitment to social justice and to applying social science to the real challenges facing diverse communities, and this shapes the character of the programme throughout. You will engage with the classical thinkers who established the discipline, including work on capitalism, bureaucracy, and social solidarity, alongside contemporary social theory addressing globalisation, digital life, migration, and environmental crisis. Research methods are central to the curriculum, and you will learn to design and conduct social research using both quantitative and qualitative approaches. Sociology develops a particular set of capacities: the ability to see structural patterns behind individual experiences, to engage critically with evidence and argument, and to communicate social analysis clearly to different audiences. Graduates pursue careers in social work, community development, education, public health, the civil service, journalism, human resources, market research, and the charity sector. Many go on to postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, social research, or professional qualifications in social work or teaching. The discipline equips you to understand and work constructively within complex social environments.
Syllabus & Modules
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