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BSc Sociology
About this course
Sociology is the systematic study of human society: how it is organised, how power is distributed within it, how inequalities arise and are sustained, and how social change happens. Rather than treating individual behaviour in isolation, sociology asks how broader structures, institutions, norms, and cultural forces shape what people do, think, and experience. It is a discipline that refuses easy certainties, training you to question assumptions, examine evidence carefully, and understand your own social position as itself a product of larger forces. This three-year full-time degree at the University of Suffolk engages directly with some of the most significant challenges facing contemporary societies. You will study complex real-world issues including gender and sexuality, racial and economic inequality, migration, the social dimensions of environmental change, and the transformations wrought by globalisation and technology. The programme develops your capacity to analyse social life critically and systematically, drawing on both qualitative and quantitative research methods and a range of theoretical traditions from Marx and Durkheim through to contemporary feminist and postcolonial thought. You will learn to gather and interpret evidence, construct careful arguments, and communicate your findings clearly in writing, skills that are valuable far beyond the academic discipline. An entry tariff of 88 points reflects a programme that is intellectually demanding but welcoming to students from diverse educational backgrounds who bring genuine curiosity about the social world. Sociology graduates pursue careers across a wide range of sectors, including social work and community services, public policy, journalism and media, market research, human resources, education, criminal justice, and the voluntary sector. Many continue to postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, criminology, or social research methods, using their undergraduate training as a platform for more specialised work.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 35 respondents (86% response rate)
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