
Criminology & Criminal Justice - 3422
Program Summary
Faculty: Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Contact: Dr Sanja Milivojevic
Campus: Sydney
Career: Undergraduate
Typical UOC Per Semester: 24
Min UOC Per Semester: 6
Max UOC Per Semester: 24
Min UOC For Award: 144
UAC Code: 422350
Domestic Entry Requirements: See Domestic Entry Requirements
International Entry Requirements: See International Entry Requirements
Award(s):
Bachelor of Criminology and Criminal Justice
View program information for previous years
Program Description
The Bachelor of Criminology & Criminal Justice can be completed full-time in Single mode (normally 3 years), in Dual mode (the equivalent of two years full-time) or part-time. The basic requirements of the program are simple. The program has a depth component and a breadth component. Students enrolled in Single mode do both the depth and breadth component while students enrolled in Dual mode only complete the depth component.
The Depth component (Blue Zone) is:
- The completion of a Criminology Core (36 UOC - 6 courses)
- The completion of a Social Research and Policy Core (42 UOC - 7 courses)
- The completion of Prescribed Criminology Electives (18 UOC - 3 courses)
- Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Electives (12 UOC - 2 courses)
- Free Electives (24 UOC - 4 courses)
- General Education (12 UOC - 2 courses)
Program Objectives and Graduate Attributes
The Graduate Attributes for this Program are as follows:
- An understanding of the key concepts and theoretical approaches which have been developed in relation to crime, deviance, victimisation, criminalisation, criminal justice, penal practice, crime control and policing;
- A critical awareness of how crime, deviance and victimisation are socially and legally constructed, and of the main agents and institutions which respond to crime and deviance, as found in the mass media, in official reports and in public opinion;
- An understanding of complex social problems and the relationships between them in terms of criminological theory, theories of policing and of crime control, theories of penal practice and evidence, and the major theories deployed throughout the social sciences;
- An understanding of the dimensions of social divisions and social diversity including an ability to understand and demonstrate the relationship of social class, gender, age, race and ethnicity, disabilities, health and other salient aspects of diversity in relation to offending, crime control, policing, criminal justice and penal systems;
- An understanding of the value of comparative analysis and a critical awareness of the local, national and international contexts of crime, criminalisation, policing, criminal justice and penal practice, policy and policy processes;
- The capacity to engage critically with fundamental questions about ethics, justice and human rights including an understanding of the human rights principles which are applicable to the different stages of the criminal justice process, policing and penal practice;
- An ability to understand and conduct social and criminological research, including an understanding of the construction of official crime statistics, an understanding of what can be achieved by different methodologies and techniques, of when a particular methodology or technique is most appropriately used, and of how the results and knowledge claims of any particular study may be critically evaluated;
- Skills in oral and written communication including an ability to communicate a reasoned argument clearly and logically, an ability to take part in and evaluate open minded discussion and debate, and an ability to target information to different audiences using a different range of media and text types;
- The skills of critical, creative and imaginative thinking concerning society and its institutions including the ability to use these skills to problem solve;
- The skills of time planning and management;
- The ability to work productively in a group;
- Understanding of the knowledge base of Social Sciences;
- Ability to conduct research.
Program Structure
Single mode (144 UOC) made up of:
- Criminology Core (36 UOC)
- Social Research and Policy Core (42 UOC)
- Prescribed Criminology Electives (18 UOC)
- Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Electives (12 UOC)
- Free Electives (24 UOC)
- General Education (12 UOC)
- Criminology Core (36 UOC)
- Social Research and Policy Core (42 UOC)
- Prescribed Criminology Electives (18 UOC)
4763 Criminology & Criminal Justice/Law.
Criminology Core
Level 1 | ||||
Level 2
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Level 3
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CRIM3001 Explaining Crimes (6 UOC)
CRIM3000 Criminology Capstone (6 UOC)
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Social Research and Policy Core
Level 1
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SRAP1000 Policy and Society (6 UOC)
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Level 2
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SRAP2002 Policy Analysis (6 UOC)
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Level 3
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Prescribed Criminology Electives
- ARTS2845 Sex, Human Rights & Justice (6 UOC)
- ARTS3871 Forensic Sociology (6 UOC)
- CRIM2014 Issues in Policing (6 UOC)
- CRIM2031 Indigenous Perspective (6 UOC)
- CRIM2032 Disability in Criminal Justice (6 UOC)
- CRIM2034 Crime, Politics and the Media (6 UOC)
- CRIM2036 Prison and Punishment (6 UOC)
- CRIM2037 Explaining Punishment (6 UOC)
- CRIM2038 Young People, Risk and Harm (6 UOC)
- CRIM2041 Crime and Punishment (6 UOC)
- CRIM3011 Crime Prevention Policy (6 UOC)
- CRIM3015 State Crime and Human Rights (6 UOC)
- CRIM3016 Crime, Borders and Security (6 UOC)
- CRIM3018 Victims' Rights (6 UOC)
- CRIM3020 The Criminal Trial (6 UOC)
- CRIM3021 History from Crime (6 UOC)
- HUMS2000 Arts Internship (6 UOC)*
- PSYC3301 Psychology and Law (6 UOC)**
Prescribed Criminology Electives
Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Electives
Free Electives
ARTS2050 Academic Writing for the Humanities
This course is available as an Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Elective or Free Elective for students wishing to develop their academic writing skills. Click here for further details about the course.General Education
Award with Distinction
Honours
Bachelor of Criminology (Honours) program 4505
Sample Program
Bachelor of Criminology & Criminal Justice - Sample Program in Single Mode- Example Only | |||||||||
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Core and Prescribed Electives COURSES
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Breadth
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UOC
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Social Research and Policy
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Criminology
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LEVEL 1 - 48 UOC | |||||||||
S1 |
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
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Free Elective
(6 UOC)
Free Elective
(6 UOC)
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24
|
|||||
S2 |
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
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Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Elective
(6 UOC)
Free Elective
(6 UOC)
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24
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|||||
LEVEL 2 - 48 UOC | |||||||||
S1 |
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
Criminology Prescribed Elective
(6 UOC)
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Free Elective
(6 UOC)
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24
|
|||||
S2 |
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
Criminology Prescribed Elective
(6 UOC)
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General Education
(6 UOC)
|
24
|
|||||
LEVEL 3 - 48 UOC | |||||||||
S1 |
(6 UOC)
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
Criminology Prescribed Elective
(6 UOC)
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24
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||||||
S2 |
(6 UOC)
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(6 UOC)
|
Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Elective
(6 UOC)
General Education
(6 UOC)
|
24
|
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Total UOC |
42
|
54
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48
|
144
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Academic Rules
Single Mode
- enrol in the Bachelor of Criminology & Criminal Justice and complete 144 UOC;
- complete the requirements for the Criminology Core
- complete the requirements for the Social Research and Policy Core
- complete 18 UOC of Prescribed Criminology Electives
- complete 12 UOC of Arts & Social Sciences Prescribed Electives
- complete 24 UOC of Free Electives
- complete 12 UOC of General Education
- complete at least 30 UOC of Level 1 courses before enrolling in Level 2 courses
- complete at least 30 UOC of Level 2 courses before enrolling in Level 3 courses
- complete at least 120 UOC overall before enrolling in the program's Capstone course
Dual Mode
- enrol in the Bachelor of Criminology & Criminal Justice and complete 96 UOC;
- complete the requirements for the Criminology Core and Prescribed Electives
- complete the requirements for the Social Research and Policy Core
- complete at least 30 UOC of Level 1 courses before enrolling in Level 2 courses
- complete at least 30 UOC of Level 2 courses before enrolling in Level 3 courses
- complete at least 72 UOC overall before enrolling in the program's Capstone course
Fees
Important Information
Further Information
Tel: + 61 2 9385 2289
Email: arts@unsw.edu.au
Location: Room G1 Ground Floor, Morven Brown building (C20)
Opening Hours: Monday to Friday 9am - 5pm
Frequently asked questions
Glossary of Terms
Area(s) of Specialisation
