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Criminology, BSc (Hons)

Brunel University London, United Kingdom

 
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Subject ranking

Overall
UK / QS 2025
38th
Overall
UK / THE 2025
40th
Overall
UK / ARWU 2024
43rd

Costs

Course feesS$33K / year
Entertainment, books
food & rent
S$17K / year
Beer S$7
MacDonalds S$10
Cinema S$20
Coffee S$5
TotalS$50K / year

Entry requirements

A Level BBC
Diploma 2.6
International Baccalaureate 29

Scholarships

Brunel International Excellence Scholarship
£6000 for tuition
More than 50 available
British Chevening Scholarships
100% for tuition and living expenses
Limited quantity

Information

Course
Code
L311
Upcoming
Intakes
Sep 2025
Course
Website (External)
Pathway
Programmes
See pathways
University
Information
WHATSAPP
+65 9650 3225
HOTLINE
+65 6333 1300

Duration

3 years
Graduate
2028
About the course

Course summary

Students studying criminology at Brunel will be taught by academic staff who are themselves actively engaged in criminological research activities – an experience which enriches the already substantial and supportive learning resources that are on offer to our students.Criminology is a fast moving constantly evolving subject which reflects current social, political and public disputes. Therefore, students are provided with opportunities and the resources needed to assist them in developing an increased awareness and appreciation of their own values and those of their cultural and political environment, and an understanding of how alternative values impact upon rival interpretations of evidence.The criminology department at Brunel both recognises and emphasises the importance of theory that is based on evidence and encourages students to engage in critical evaluation of concepts of crime and deviance, including state crime, crimes of the powerful, crime prevention, security, and crime control policies, as well as other responses to crime and deviance. It nurtures a lively debate and dialogue between a range of theoretical and methodological perspectives, employing both quantitative and qualitative data in considering the distribution of crime, and processes of criminalisation and victimisation over space and time.As a forward-thinking critical criminology degree student will be encouraged to engage in debates about race, gender, migration, social harms, green criminology and a wide variety of other current topics while being furnished with the necessary research training in both quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis to engage with and challenge debates as they evolve.The programme sets out from a broad multi-disciplinary Social Sciences content at FHEQ Level 4 where criminology students will be studying alongside sociology students in some modules as well as on criminology specific modules and then to a more focussed disciplinary content at FHEQ Level 5, and more specific thematic content at FHEQ Level 6, where students are encouraged to personalize their studies through their choice of a range of advanced optional modular blocks.

Modules

Sample modules: Crime, Media & Society, War and Humanitarianism, Captialism and Sex, Digital Cultures.To view the full list of modules for this course and further information on degree content, please visit the Brunel website: brunel.ac.uk/study/undergraduate/criminology-bsc

Assessment method

Assessments will be varied but always relevant to the nature of the activity/enquiry being carried out and to the expected outcome – which may involve presentation of research, written essay, portfolio work and group participation. Assessment will be through a variety of means to evaluate different skill sets:Coursework essaysExaminations (seen and unseen)Individual and Group projectsPortfoliosLearning ContractWork diariesReportsCase StudiesCritical ReviewsOnline assessmentStudents’ knowledge and understanding of learning outcomes will be studied via a range of assessment practices. This mix simultaneously will enforce a broad and comprehensive coverage of the Programme themes and the more selective, creative and skills-oriented form of understanding that will come from particular blocks. Knowledge and understanding of practice-based, research-oriented outcome will be assessed by means of reports of skill-oriented work (as with research methods) at FHEQ Level 4 and 5, and the final year dissertation at FHEQ Level.


What you will learn

Sample modules: Crime, Media & Society, War and Humanitarianism, Captialism and Sex, Digital Cultures. To view the full list of modules for this course and further information on degree content, please visit the Brunel website: brunel.ac.uk/study/undergraduate/criminology-bsc

A local representative of Brunel University London in Singapore is available online to assist you with enquiries about this course.