Viewing course details for 2025-26 year of entry
- Code
- L350
- Attendance
- Full-time, Part-time
- Start
- September 2025
- Fees
- £9,535* (UK) | £16,600 (INT)
- Duration
- 3 years full-time, 4 years full-time (with placement), 4-6 years part-time
- Course Leader
- Naomi Graham
- Study mode
- On campus
- Location
- Hendon campus
- Entry Requirements
- 104 UCAS points
- Placement year
- Optional
- School / Department
- Department of Law and Social Sciences
Why study Criminology at Middlesex?
Explore the fascinating causes of crime, critique justice systems, and understand the social dynamics shaping our world. At Middlesex, you’ll study criminology in the birthplace of critical criminology, located in one of the world’s most vibrant global cities. Join a diverse and inclusive community where research, collaboration, and social responsibility are at the heart of everything we do.
- A Leading Centre for Criminology: Middlesex has been at the forefront of criminological teaching and research since the 1970s. Study at a university that helped establish criminology as an independent discipline in the UK.
- Research-Focused Learning: Gain hands-on experience in both quantitative and qualitative research, exploring real-world data to understand crime, its causes, and its consequences. Develop analytical and critical thinking skills that are highly valued across multiple sectors.
- Social Responsibility and Change: Engage with issues like social justice, equity, sustainability, and societal change. Learn how criminology contributes to addressing inequalities and creating a fairer world.
- Practical Experience: Participate in field trips to the Old Bailey, visits to courts, prisons, and criminal justice organisations, and an optional volunteering module that integrates real-world experience into your learning.
- Expert Teaching and Collaboration: Learn from leading academics whose research shapes contemporary criminological thought. Our team-teaching approach ensures you experience different perspectives and teaching styles, enriching your understanding.
- Global Networks and Careers: Middlesex’s international collaborations and extensive networks open doors to careers in public, private, government, NGO, and academic sectors. Criminology is an excellent foundation for roles in research, policy, education, and more.
With Middlesex’s exceptional teaching, global connections, and commitment to social change, this is your opportunity to join a discipline that matters and prepares you for a meaningful and impactful career.
3 great reasons to pick this course
About your course
This course offers a deep dive into the complex world of crime, justice, and societal responses to deviance. Explore the experiences and representations of crime and justice, focusing on social divisions and their impact on minorities. Learn from expert researchers, opt for an industry placement to gain practical experience, and build a strong foundation for a meaningful career in criminology and beyond.
In this module, you will become acquainted with the dynamic nature of crime across law, politics, society, and culture. The module challenges conventional perceptions of crime, exploring its contested essence over time and space. Emphasis is placed on understanding the impact of social factors on crime constructions including issues of class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and religion.
This module facilitates an exploration of the intricate relationship between crime, culture and society and the seeming paradox between society’s fear of crime and fascination with violent crime. You will gain a comprehensive understanding of contemporary criminology’s major theoretical approaches this foundation is crucial in building knowledge and understanding of diverse perspectives on crime thereby helping to form a cornerstone for further studies. The module also facilitates the development of key academic skills including the synthesis and interpretation of information and research data, the construction of oral and written assignments and citation and referencing.
This module introduces you to social research inquiry as a way of seeing and interpreting the world. The module focuses on how ethical qualitative and quantitative social research is carried out. It will teach you the basic components of social sciences research. The lens of communities will be used to highlight the context in which the events, issues and problems we study, occur within.
You will be engaging with a range of qualitative and quantitative research methods. You will learn how data are produced in different forms and will develop ways to analyse them. The module builds key research capabilities through a range of skills-based tasks and adopts a developmental style through a research portfolio assessment. You will be able to apply knowledge through practical activities. Many of these skills will have relevance beyond your degree and will be attractive to future employers.
This module introduces you to key criminal justice institutions, exploring contemporary issues within the police, courts, prisons, probation, immigration detention, youth justice, and the forensic mental health system. This module familiarises you with the understanding of current policies and practice, emphasizing international and cross-national influences on criminal justice.
Additionally, the module introduces the UK legal system, fostering an awareness of its role in shaping criminal justice responses to crime, deviance, and public insecurity. You will engage with legal frameworks, procedural rules, and explore various punishment measures, while developing skills in synthesizing official statistics and evaluating research data.
This module introduces the foundations of sociological theory to allow you to appreciate central questions and ideas that have shaped sociology’s development as a discipline, and to recognise the ways these continue to shape sociologists’ engagement with today’s social world, both in academic contexts as well as in practical settings. The module content serves as foundational knowledge for other sociology and criminology modules. It introduces you to taking a sociological perspective on human interaction and to using the sociological imagination to analyse a range of social issues as well as how actors and institutions might respond to these issues in a sociologically informed way. You will learn core approaches to understanding contemporary society, by studying social structures, interactions, institutions, social movements and activism from a global and intersectional lens. They will also learn core aspects of the relation between theory and practice in contemporary sociology and its applications.
This module aims to develop your knowledge and understanding of key theoretical ideas and debates in criminology. It requires you to reflect on what putting issues such as power and rights at the centre of criminological theory and practice might mean for crime, justice and punishment. The module will cover developments and trends influencing criminological discussion, debates and research and these developments and trends are assessed in relation to emerging social, political and cultural patterns. You will develop knowledge and understanding of how criminological theory is constructed and will be required to apply theoretical knowledge to a range of contemporary issues and trends of prominent criminological interest and concern.
This module introduces you to areas of employment that can be considered for criminology career pathways. It facilitates your engagement with various crime control, offending and support services professions and provides opportunities to explore the knowledge and skills required to perform in related positions. The module also fosters an awareness of critical reflection and ethical behaviours and the implications for professional practice and conduct. Additionally, the module supports your ability to utilise information and tools relevant to personal and professional development thereby providing practical opportunities to advance employability goals.
The aim of this module is threefold:
(A) You will propose a methodological research project on a topic of interest, including a review of the literature and research questions suitable for;
(B) A mixed method project; and
(C) part of the project involves forming a conversational guide and a survey, collecting and analysing data, to form a portfolio. This module equips you with the knowledge and skills to use SPSS for data analysis and thematic analysis to analyse qualitative data. By studying this module you will be prepared to undertake qualitative and quantitative research for their dissertation.
This module introduces you to intersections between the criminal courts, sentencing, prisons and rehabilitation. It has a particular focus on the aims of punishment, the use of imprisonment and key developments in penal policy and practice. It will facilitate your abilities to apply theoretical perspectives to sentencing, punishment and prison issues and to analyse the impact of policy on the experiences of those who are imprisoned and the work of the key professionals and practitioners working in the prison system. The module will develop your skills in drawing on a range of documentary evidence to analyse and evaluate sentencing aims, the purpose and place of prisons in society and to foster a critical interest in prison and punishment reform.
The module will help you develop an understanding of key theoretical perspectives on race and social justice in relation to lived realities, in the UK and globally. The module will equip you with in-depth understanding of the concept of race and its social construction, power and privilege, including white power and privilege across different spaces, racism and intersectional oppression. The module will also focus on institutional racism and resistance, on the power of the state and legislation, providing a critical reflection through interdisciplinary scholarship.
This module prepares you to engage with race and social justice topics for their dissertations and/or those wanting to pursue a career in a related field. With guest lectures from practitioners and a range of creative and academic assessments, the module encourages co-leadership, practice-led learning, digital literacy and technology-enhanced learning and employability.
The module will expand your thinking around victimisation and consider this topic from a broader perspective, assessing societal responses to victimisation and who we consider to be a victim. The module will explore multiple crime types such as: sexual and domestic violence; homicide; sex work; hate crime; financial crime; state crime and other types of crime, comparing and contrasting different theories and perspectives in relation to the concept of victimisation. In addition, the module will develop your reflective learning skills both by reflecting on your own learning and formulating feedback for the work of others.
This module will strengthen, extend and apply the knowledge, skills and experiences you would have gained from your course in the context of a working environment, and to complement, stimulate, reinforce and encourage the development of discipline-specific technical knowledge, and your transferable skills. You will gain knowledge of professional requirements in an industry context and record and critically reflect on your personal practice.
The module will explore key policy topics linked to crime, deviance, harm and criminal justice across different global contexts. It will support you in developing a critical awareness of how and why policy is designed and implemented and how it impacts offending, victimisation, harms and criminal justice responses. It will critically explore different areas of society, such as education and gender and citizenship, to develop knowledge and understanding of the links between contemporary policies and criminological outcomes. In response to the topics explored, you will develop an awareness of alternative approaches and ideological perspectives.
The module will advance your critical and creative understanding of the ways in which the use of digital technologies is reshaping fundamental dimensions of social life, from personal relationships and vulnerabilities to transformations in crime and violent extremism. The module allows you to examine how digital communications are embedded in everyday life, linking theoretical approaches, empirical material, and your experiments with digital tools, particularly generative AI.
This module will synthesise learning from the criminology and sociology programmes of study, providing an opportunity for you to study independently and investigate a topic in depth, in accordance with the Sociology and Criminology Benchmark Statement. It fosters academic curiosity; an inquiry-based approach, and the employment and application of research skills which will facilitate the development of a higher level of theorising.
This module will critically engage you in contemporary debates surrounding drugs, drug use and their control. It will develop your knowledge and understanding of the processes involved in social definitions of drugs, drug use and people who use drugs and your skills in applying theoretical perspectives to drug issues. It will stimulate critical analysis and evaluation of the laws, policies and institutions of drugs control and their social, economic and political contexts. The module will foster and develop your critical interest in the reform of drugs control policy.
This module will develop your understanding of research project design while equipping you with ethical research skills needed for independent social science research projects. These skills include a criminology or sociology topic for research, conducting a literature review to justify proposed research questions, selecting appropriate research methodologies and methods while considering the ethical issues around the research project. You'll develop project design and management skills including taking leadership of your learning and being reflexive of the process.
This module uses the workplace as a site of learning and inquiry. It supports the integration of theory and practice and provides opportunities to apply methods of inquiry to practice related problems in order to recommend solutions and improve work practice. The module also immerses you in a process of reflection, cultivates knowledge of ethical and professional behaviours and builds some of the key understandings associated with the worker-researcher. In sum this module supports the development of a range of skills and knowledge necessary for career and professional development.
This module facilitates your critical engagement with the crimes such as white-collar, corporate, environmental and state crime (crimes of the powerful) as well as transnational organised crimes, often committed by both formal and informal powerful organisations. The module provides you with a comprehensive understanding of the causes, consequences of such variety of crime as well as equip them with the ability to identify effective legislations, policies and policing strategies. You will engage and assess the main theories that explain these types of power crime and evaluate policies and judicial response at international and transnational level.
This module will discuss the dynamics of violence from a gender-informed perspective, how it is used by perpetrators, controlled, and used to control. The module highlights the interconnections between violence, gender, sexuality and crime, and illustrates the blurred boundaries between interpersonal, self-inflicted, community and structural violence. On completing the module, you will explore and learn about the social and spatial parameters of violent crime, theoretical and layperson perspectives on violence, the links between sex, sexuality and violence, and how violence is gendered.
To find out more about this course please download the Criminology BSc course specification (PDF).
"Studying at Middlesex was a challenge but became one of my greatest achievements to date. I was supported by amazing lecturers along the way and was able to do a placement in my final year because of this. The course is right for anyone who wants to work within the criminal justice system and gain a deeper understanding of criminality."
Abigail Akoto
Criminology BA (Youth Justice) student
Innovative teaching and learning
You’ll learn through a blend of theory and practice, focusing on key elements of criminology and sociology including crime and control, social sciences, justice and punishment, and forensic skills. You'll be taught by an experienced teaching team with a wide range of expertise and professional experience.
We put a strong emphasis on diverse, practice-based approaches to teaching and learning which will be fully supported by a wide range of online materials via the Mylearning facility. Pre-recorded concept videos will concisely introduce and examine key concepts/theories and how they relate to real world scenarios.
Interactive teaching sessions offer overviews of key issues and themes, clarify questions, and assist youthe student into constructing pathways to engage with discipline knowledge, while online and in-class exercises allow you to monitor your progress and learning.
Seminars offer the opportunity to discuss issues covered by key concept videos and reading, and to clarify and communicate ideas and questions around crime, deviance, victimisation and social harm.
Workshops allow you to explore ways of putting criminological ideas into practice, by working on problems and constructing solutions, in particular through working on data and evidence and their relationship with major forms of crime control and victimisation.
Guided reading and independent study allow youstudents to build foundational knowledge and appreciate the way criminological argument is constructed.
Group work allows the opportunity for self-responsibility and teamwork, and for understanding the strengths and limits of collaboration with others.
Laboratory work and data analysis allow an appreciation of what constitutes criminological data and evidence.
Fieldwork projects, site visits, practitioner lectures and work-based learning build an understanding of the distinctive way criminologists approach crime and responses to crime, and allow you to engage with questions of social justice in ‘real life’ and to explore what it means to act ethically.
During your first year, your weekly timetable will typically consist of:
- 4 hours of engaging interactive sessions
- 8 hours of seminars.
Outside of teaching hours, you’ll learn independently through self-study which will involve reading articles and books, working on projects, undertaking research, and preparing for assessments including coursework, presentations and exams.
Here is an indication of how you will split your time:
Year 1
Percentage |
Hours |
Typical activity |
22% |
264 |
Teaching, learning and assessment |
78% |
936 |
Independent learning |
Year 2
Percentage |
Hours |
Typical activity |
24% |
299 |
Teaching, learning and assessment |
76% |
971 |
Independent learning |
Year 3
Percentage |
Hours |
Typical activity |
24% |
299 |
Teaching, learning and assessment |
76% |
971 |
Independent learning |
Our excellent teaching and support teams will help you develop your skills from research and practical skills to critical thinking. And we offer free 24-hour laptop loans with full desktop software, free printing and Wi-Fi to use on or off campus.
This course is based on 100% coursework.
You will be assessed through a variety of methods including written assessments, essays, reports, practical sessions, presentations and group assessments. Written work includes policy critique, case study analysis reports, position papers, 'in-tray exercies', media reviews and a final disseration or project report.
Other ways you will demostrate learning includes posters, individual and group presentations, computer-based exercises and data analysis.
You will be given regular feedback on your work. You will develop IT skills and the ability to interpret numerical data.
We'll test your understanding and progress with informal and formal tests.
The informal tests usually take place at least once per module, from which you’ll receive feedback from your tutor. The grades from these tests don’t count towards your final marks.
There are formal assessments for each module, usually at the end, which will count towards your module and your final marks.
Assessments are reviewed annually and may be updated based on student feedback or feedback from an external examiner.
To help you achieve the best results, we will provide regular feedback.
At Middlesex, you’ll have the chance to gain invaluable practical experience through a year-long work placement between your second and final years, extending your degree to four years if studied full-time. This sandwich year option allows you to apply your knowledge in real-world settings while enhancing your employability and gaining hands-on insights into the field of criminology.
Learning at Work
Instead of completing the Ethical Research and Project Management module and the Dissertation in your final year, you can choose the Learning at Work (60-credit) module. This pathway provides an opportunity to integrate work-based learning into your degree, allowing you to develop professional skills while earning academic credit.
Career-Focused Learning
Employability skills are embedded throughout your degree in classroom settings and specific modules. Practical experience gained through work placements further enhances your readiness for a meaningful and impactful career.
Our students have gained valuable experience with a wide range of organisations, such as:
- Victim Support, British Transport Police, and Herts Police
- Solace Women’s Aid and Southwark Youth Offending Service
- Centrepoint, Friends of the Earth, and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
- Special Constable Training and Prison Service
- Barnet Mencap and the Anne Frank Trust UK
These placements provide diverse opportunities to develop your skills, build your professional network, and explore careers in areas such as youth work, community engagement, policy development, and criminal justice.
Entry requirements
At Middlesex, we're proud of how we recognise the potential of future students like you. We make fair and aspirational offers because we want you to aim high, and we’ll support you all the way.
Qualifications
- 104 UCAS Points including GCSE English Grade C/4
- empty col
- A-Level
- BCC
- BTEC
- MMM
- Access requirements
- Overall pass: must include 45 credits at level 3, of which all 45 must be at Merit or higher
- Combinations
- A combination of A level, BTEC and other accepted qualifications that total 104 UCAS Tariff points
We’ll always be as flexible as possible and take into consideration any barriers you may have faced in your learning. And, if you don’t quite get the grades you hoped for, we’ll also look at more than your qualifications. Things like your work experience, other achievements and your personal statement.
We'll accept T Levels for entry onto our undergraduate degree courses (including our extended courses with a foundation year) with standard application of science requirements and GCSEs in line with UCAS tariff calculation.
Our general entry requirements page outlines how we make offers where we have given a range (e.g. BBB – BBC in A levels), and how you will be made an offer if you are studying a combination of qualifications (e.g. BTEC and A level). In both cases, we will base this on information you’ve provided on your application.
Foundation year
If you don't meet the entry requirements, why not consider our Law and Social Science Foundation course to help you prepare for the full degree?
Mature students (over 21)
We welcome applications from mature candidates, including those without formal qualifications if you can demonstrate relevant experience and ability.
Academic credit
If you have a qualification such as a foundation degree or HND or have gained credit at another university, you may be able to join us in year two or three. Find out how you can transfer courses.
If you have relevant qualifications or work experience, we may be able to count this towards your entry requirements. Find out more about prior learning accreditation.
Interviews
Interviews are not required for this course.
We welcome students from the UK and all over the world. Join students from over 122 countries and discover why so many international students call our campus home:
- Quality teaching with top facilities plus flexible online learning
- Welcoming north London campus that's only 30 minutes from central London
- Work placements and networking with top London employers
- Award-winning career support to get you where you want to go after university.
Qualifications
We accept a wide range of international qualifications. Find out more about the accepted qualifications on your country's support page. If you are unsure of the suitability of your qualifications or would like help with your application, please contact your nearest international office.
English language
You will need to meet our English language requirements. And, don’t worry If you don't meet our minimum English language requirements, as we offer a Pre-sessional English course.
Visas
To study with us in the UK, you might need a Student visa. Please check to see if this applies to you.
You can apply now via UCAS using the code L350. Visit the UCAS site today.
Need help with your application? Check out our undergraduate application page.
Careers
How can the BSc Criminology Honours support your career?
A degree in criminology from Middlesex is an excellent foundation for a wide range of careers in criminal justice and beyond. Combining theoretical knowledge with practical skills, the course prepares you for roles that require critical analysis, research expertise, and effective communication. Many graduates also pursue further education, progressing to master’s and PhD programmes.
Career Opportunities in Criminal Justice
Criminology graduates often find roles in:
- Policing and Security: Border security, National Crime Agency (NCA), police services, and agencies tackling cybercrime, environmental crime, financial fraud, and drug-related offences.
- Victim Support and Protection: Roles in child protection, internet safety, or prevention of radicalisation and extremism.
- Court and Legal Work: Supporting court services, offender rehabilitation, or victim advocacy.
Graduate Employers
Our graduates have successfully secured positions in organisations such as:
- Central and local government agencies
- Police and security services
- Court services and youth justice organisations
- Victim support services
- Voluntary and community-based sectors
Transferable Skills
The skills you develop during your criminology degree are highly transferable and valuable in a variety of fields, including:
- Data research and analysis
- Critical thinking and reasoned debate
- Oral, written, and visual communication
- Policy analysis and theoretical concept understanding
Beyond Criminal Justice
Criminology graduates have also found rewarding careers in health and education services, as well as roles in policy development, crime analysis, and campaigning. This degree provides the flexibility to explore diverse industries while contributing meaningfully to society.
Equip yourself with the expertise, critical mindset, and transferable skills to thrive in criminal justice or pursue opportunities in other impactful sectors.
"I have always been interested in understanding criminal behaviour, and wanted to gain a theoretical understanding to add to, and improve on, my previous policing perception. I particularly enjoyed the 'Institutions of Criminal Justice' module which required court visits to both Magistrates' and Crown Courts. However, on the whole, the knowledge, experience, and skill that I have gained throughout the course are collectively the most enjoyable aspect of my undergraduate degree at Middlesex.
Prior to studying Criminology, I was sure that I wanted to join the Metropolitan Police. While this remains an option for the future, my current priority lies in further education and I am presently looking at applying for a GDL (Graduate Diploma in Law)."
Andrew Serghides
Criminology BA student
Student support and inclusion
Fees
The fees below are for the 2025/26 academic year:
UK students1
Full-time: £9,535*
Part-time: £79 per taught credit
*Subject to the government’s proposed increase in the tuition fee cap receiving Parliamentary approval3
As a part of our commitment to an excellent student offer at Middlesex University, we pledge to invest the additional money from tuition fee increases into the student experience, and we are consulting at present on what these improvements will be and will follow up with further details
International students2
Full-time students: £16,600
Part-time students: £138 per taught credit
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