Delivery Type | Delivery length / details |
---|---|
Lecture | |
Lecture | 1 x 2 hour lecture and 2x1 hour lecture per week - 30 hours in total |
Seminars / Tutorials | 6 hours - 3 x 2 hour seminars |
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Review of an article. 1 x 1000 word assessed essay required in Week 9 | 33% |
Semester Exam | 1.5 Hours A 30 minute compulsory section and one essay to be completed in 1 hour - total 1.5 hours. 1.5hr Unseen Exam | 67% |
Supplementary Assessment | By retaking failed element | 100% |
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
1. Analyse both what a criminological theory is able to do and, often more importantly, the limits of its worth.
2. Analyse and evaluate strengths and weaknesses in the existing legal and enforcement provisions from a more socio-legal viewpoint.
3. Display an understanding of the major theories, concepts, values, debates, principles and approaches in the study of criminology and of how crime, deviance and victimisation are socially and legally constructed.
4. Identify key issues, policies, processes, institutions, actors and debates in deviance, crime, law and criminology.
5. Explain the discussions in deviance, crime, victimology, academic criminological debates and responses to these from local, national and international perspectives and the impact of political, media and popular opinion on this area.
6. Show how these approaches and the disciplines of criminology and law help us to explain, understand and influence crime and its effects and are, in turn influenced by other disciplines and theories.
7. Identify the key dynamics, processes and problems facing contemporary criminology, law and the legal system.
8. Explain and analyse the interaction between criminological theory and policy decisions in the area of crime and punishment.
9. Identify problems in the theoretical and explanatory materials and suggest possible solutions.
10. Demonstrate effective basic research skills necessary in finding and interpreting theoretical materials.
This module aims to provide students with the basic core of knowledge necessary to criminology. It will introduce them to the interdisciplinary nature of the subject by demonstrating how the disparate stands of knowledge build up theories which enable a better understanding of crime and criminality.
This module is at CQFW Level 4