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BSc Sociology
About this course
Sociology is the systematic study of human social life, concerned with understanding how individuals, communities, and institutions relate to each other and how social structures shape human experience and behaviour. It examines the connections between people and the forces that organise social life, including social class, race, gender, age, and power, asking how these structures produce inequality, identity, and collective action. Sociology tackles difficult questions about poverty, discrimination, migration, austerity, surveillance, and social unrest, and provides rigorous analytical tools for understanding the world as it actually is rather than as we might assume it to be. At the University of Salford, this three-year full-time programme develops your understanding of human connections and the social structures that shape how people behave. You will engage with the major theoretical traditions of sociology, from classical theory through to contemporary debates, and develop skills in qualitative and quantitative research methods that allow you to investigate social phenomena rigorously. Salford's location in Greater Manchester gives the programme a rich social context, in a city with a complex history of industrial transformation, economic inequality, cultural diversity, and political activism. You will develop the ability to analyse social issues from multiple theoretical perspectives, to gather and interpret evidence about the social world, and to communicate your findings and arguments clearly. Critical thinking, reflexivity, and the capacity to engage with uncomfortable truths about social inequality are central to sociological education. Graduates from sociology programmes pursue careers in social research, local government, the charity sector, health and social care, education, journalism, public policy, and a wide range of other fields where understanding social behaviour and institutional dynamics is valued. The analytical and research skills developed are broadly transferable. Postgraduate study in sociology, social work, public policy, or a related discipline is a natural continuation.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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