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Criminology

Category
Contact

James Roche, J.D.
Assistant Director, School of Social and Behavioral Sciences
jroche@une.edu

Degree name
Criminology, B.A.
Sections

Mission

The Criminology program will: provide a deeply contextualized understanding of crime, law, justice and punishment; facilitate the development of critical competencies including, critical reading, writing, and analysis within the study of criminology; enable the focused study of how crime and the law shape the worlds in which we live; and afford opportunities for experiential learning via student research and professional experiences.

Major Description

Criminology focuses on the study of crimes, criminals, crime victims, theories explaining illegal and deviant behavior, the social reaction to crime and criminals, the effectiveness of anti-crime policies and the broader political terrain of social control. Criminology programs are interdisciplinary, but ordinarily borrow much from sociology as well as other social sciences and humanities disciplines. Criminology programs are thus grounded in the liberal arts, and provide a rigorous engagement with crime and the institutions that are created to contend with it. The professional profile of instructors in criminology is generally an academic background and a terminal degree in criminology or a related field.

Curricular Requirements

Nor’easter Core RequirementsCredits
Total Credits40
Program Required CoursesCredits
CRL 205 – The Criminal Justice System3
CRL 345 – Critical Criminology3
PSC 125 – Understanding Law: An Introduction or PSC 210 – Constitutional Law3
SOC 170 – Deviance and Crime3
SOC 268 – Practice of Social Science Research3
SOC 270 – Classical Social Theory or SOC 280 – Contemporary Social Theory3
SOC 300 – Sociology Internship or PSY 300 – Psychology Internship3–15
SOC 311 – Theories of Race and Racism3
SOC 370 – Applied Field Method in Sociology3
SOC 493 – Cap Expt: Internship or SOC 494 – Cap Exp: Thesis3–16
Four (4) Program Specific Electives12
Minimum Total Credits42
Open Elective Courses (as needed to reach 120 credits)Variable
Minimum Total Required Credits120
Program Specific ElectivesCredits
ANT 312 – Human Trafficking3
CRL 206 – Juvenile Justice3
CRL 210 – Forensic Eyewitness Interviews3
HIS 266 – History of Drugs in the Americas3
PSC 241 – Human Rights in World Politics3
PSC 278 – Pol Sci Human Trad II3
PSC 330 – Theories of Politics and War3
PSY 205 – Abnormal Psychology3
PSY 236 – Mental Health & Society3
PSY 370 – Drugs, Society, and Behavior3
SOC 333 – Sociology of Law3
SOC 421 – A Just Society?3

Please note: While some courses can fulfill both core and program requirements, the credits earned do not count twice towards the minimum total required credits for the degree.

Learning Outcomes

At the completion of the Bachelor of Arts with a major in Criminology program students will be able to:

  • Distinguish the differing agencies associated with the social control of criminal, regulatory, and international law violations.
  • Summarize and differentiate the major theories of crime and criminalization.
  • Recognize, theoretically and empirically, structural inequalities and their relation to crime and social control.
  • Use criminological methods, or investigative techniques, to assess patterns of crime, criminalization, and victimization.

Academic and Technical Standards

A  grade point average of 2.00 is necessary to be approved to add a major in Criminology.  A minimum grade of C- must be achieved in all courses used toward program requirements in Criminology. See Undergraduate Academic Policy also.

Transfer Credit

See Undergraduate Admissions for more information.

Admissions

See Undergraduate Admissions for more information.

Financial Information

Tuition and fees for subsequent years may vary. Other expenses include books and housing. For more information regarding tuition and fees, please consult the Financial Information section of this catalog.