About this course
Crime is evolving. New technologies and more complex societal pressures are leading to new criminal activities. Our BA (Hons) Crime and Criminal Justice degree is designed to educate future criminal justice professionals. We offer you the deep understanding of the causes of crime, criminal behaviour and how to combat crime that are needed for a career safeguarding the public, supporting victims, protecting the vulnerable, and helping to rehabilitate offenders. We’ll guide you as you investigate the individual, social, legal and political forces that shape both crime and how it is controlled, as well as the interrelationships between research, theory, policy and practice in criminal justice. Areas such as criminal investigation, multi-agency working, ethics and diversity, the penal system, mental health, human rights, social justice, restorative justice, community safety, poverty, and safeguarding people at risk will be addressed, along with specific crimes such as human trafficking, modern slavery, gender and domestic violence, hate crime and terrorism, youth crime, illegal drug use and anti-social behaviour.
Career Prospects
Graduates from this course typically go into the following occupations:
2435 Professional/Chartered company secretaries
1162 Senior police officers
3319 Protective service associate professionals
3314 Prison service officers (below principal officer)
4112 Local government administrative occupations
3312 Police officers (sergeant and below)
Related Courses
Crime and Criminal Justice (Foundation Entry)
Burnley College
BA Full-time including foundation year 4 Years UG Burnley
UCAS Points
64 points
Education and Learning (Top Up)
Burnley College
BA Full-time 1 Year UG Burnley
Medical Biology
Burnley College
BSc Full-time 3 Years UG Burnley
UCAS Points
104 - 112 points
Course Details
- Qualification
- Bachelor of Arts - BA
- Study Mode
- Full-time
- Duration
- 3 Years
- Start Date
- 2025
- Academic Year
- 2025
- Campus / Location
- Burnley
- Scheme
- Undergraduate
- Subjects
- Sociology