Semester 1
Compulsory
Advanced Research Methods
The module introduces advanced qualitative and quantitative data analysis techniques and prepares students for dissertation research.
Social Theories
This module aims to introduce students to Social Theory and explores the core ideas of both classical and contemporary social theories in their social and historical context. The module describes, interprets and contrasts these social theories and shows how they can be used to analyse and critically reflect on social life and trends in modern society.
Optional
Political Psychology
The module explores the relationship between psychology, politics and society, examining how political attitudes, behaviours and identities are shaped.
Urban Geographies
The aim of this module is to use a geographical perspective to explore leading-edge processes of urban change and to critically analyse urban policy.
Your Future Career: Preparing for the World of Work
What do you know? What are skills? Where are they going to take you? This module will help you to answer those questions by building on transferrable skills and encouraging you to reflect on your learning. In addition, you’ll learn about the UK job market, and how to negotiate a range of recruitment tasks including decoding job specifications, writing an application, interviews, psychometric tests and the use of AI. Combine these with your degree and graduate with confidence.
Sport, Diversity and Social Justice
The aim of this module is for students to develop a critical understanding of the relationships between sport, diversity and social justice as they relate to contexts within and around sport, coaching and pedagogy.
Women and Crime: Victims, Offenders and Survivors
The aims of this module are to examine the role of gender within victimisation, offending, and interactions with the criminal justice system. The module focuses on theory and literature that unpacks the potential differences (and similarities!) between the criminological experiences of men, women, and non-binary/trans people. Much of criminology assumes that the 'male' is the norm, so this module will provide an alternative lens for analysis.
Languages
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Semester 2
Compulsory
Doing Quantitative Research
This module aims to introduce students to advanced quantitative methods of data analysis and to prepare them for their dissertation project.
Globalisation, Postcolonialism and Migration
The aim of this module is to provide students with an understanding and appreciation of the links between globalisation, colonial legacies and migration and to familiarise them with a selection of substantive themes in the sociology of global inequalities. The module will discuss the role of globalisation in the development of our contemporary world and reflect on its consequences, counter-currents and social changes.
Digital Lives and Society
Digital technologies increasingly shape our everyday lives and societies. This module takes a sociological approach and examines how digital technologies shape identities, interaction, intimate relations, inequalities, the economy, health and mental health.
Optional
Psychological Disorders in Society
The aims of this module is to introduce students to the social impact of a range of psychological disorders (of mental wellbeing, cognitive functioning, sensory capacity and social adaptation), with coverage of conceptual and policy issues in diagnosis, treatment and support.
Conceptualising Sport
The aim of this module is to develop a critical understanding of more advanced social scientific concepts which combine to form the basis of social theories and perspectives used in the analysis of sport and physical cultures in modern societies across the world.
Inequalities Across the Life Course
Social scientists have long been concerned with the causes and transmission of inequalities in human societies. These include differences in a range of socioeconomic outcomes such as educational attainment, income, wealth, and health. It is now well known that inequality in lifetime outcomes are the result of dynamic processes that start to develop in utero and then compound over the different stages of the life-course.
In this module we will look at the development of socioeconomic inequalities using a life-cycle perspective with attention at how social policy influences individuals' lives and inequalities at the different points of the life-cycle.
The aims of the module are:
- Introduce the main theories of human development and socioeconomic mobility that have been proposed in the social and natural sciences.
- Study the emergence and development of inequalities over the life-course with attention to role of early childhood experiences.
- Consider the role of social policy and social institutions such as families, schools and communities in shaping individuals' opportunities and trajectories over the life-course.
- Use of statistical software and longitudinal microdata to investigate inequalities over the life-course.
Intoxication and Society
This module aims to provide a thorough grounding in debates about the role of intoxication in contemporary society by examining the contested role of alcohol and other drugs in society from social and cultural perspectives. The module encourages students to think critically about individual, group and institutional responses to the benefits and harms caused by particular intoxicants whilst understanding the complexity of issues relating to regulation, control and commercialisation.
University-wide Language Programme
This is a 10 credit module from the University-wide language programme.