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Politics and Sociology BA (Hons)

On this Politics and Sociology degree, you'll explore the key social and political challenges shaping our world, from inequality and climate crises to human rights and global security, while developing the skills to drive meaningful change.

兔子先生 Connected Degree - 3 year course with 4th year placement

Key information

UCAS code:

L380

Typical offer:

96-112 points to include a minimum of 2 A levels, or equivalent.

See full entry requirements
Study mode and duration
Start date

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Overview

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Explore the forces shaping our world today. Investigate power, inequality, and social change across communities, nations, and global systems.

Discover how political decisions and social movements influence everyday lives鈥攁nd how you can play a role in shaping the future.

With real-world research, hands-on fieldwork, and expert-led teaching, this BA (Hons) Politics and Sociology degree gives you the tools to understand and challenge the world around you.

Course highlights

  • Learn from research-active staff who contribute to the University's top-ranked Area Studies research, tackling some of today鈥檚 most urgent social and political issues

  • Tailor your degree to suit your interests and career ambitions, with module options ranging from global inequalities and climate justice to digital politics and gender

  • Take part in our Academic Enrichment programme, including events such as 鈥淢odel UN鈥 simulations and 鈥淨uestion Times鈥 with local MPs, councillors and political campaigners

  • Develop real-world experience and professional connections through employer-led events, student-led activities and community partnerships

  • Choose from a wide range of innovative assessments, including podcasts, infographics, policy briefs, short videos, research posters, and business reports 鈥 many of which you鈥檒l co-design with academic staff

  • Carry out a final-year dissertation or project on a topic you're passionate about, with the freedom to shape both the format and focus

  • Go on fieldwork trips and engage in applied research that connects classroom theory to lived social and political realities

  • Take part in a work placement year after your second or third year on this Connected Degree 鈥 we're the only UK university to offer flexible sandwich placements for undergraduates

Contact information

Admissions

+44 (0) 23 9284 5566

Contact Admissions

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This course is available through Clearing.

Guaranteed accommodation

Apply through Clearing and you'll be offered a guaranteed room in halls if you accept your course offer within 48 hours of receiving it and apply for accommodation as a new full-time undergraduate student by the deadline.

We have a variety of affordable accommodation options with en-suite halls from 拢131 per week.

View our halls

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Entry requirements

BA (Hons) Politics and Sociology entry requirements

Typical offers

  • A levels - BBC-CCC
  • UCAS points - 96-112 points to include a minimum of 2 A levels, or equivalent. (calculate your UCAS points)
  • BTECs (Extended Diplomas) - DMM-MMM
  • International Baccalaureate - 25

You may need to have studied specific subjects or GCSEs - .

English language requirements

  • English language proficiency at a minimum of IELTS band 6.0 with no component score below 5.5.

.

We also accept other standard English tests and qualifications, as long as they meet the minimum requirements of your course.

If you don't meet the English language requirements yet, you can achieve the level you need by successfully completing a pre-sessional English programme before you start your course.

Typical offers

  • A levels - BBC-CCC
  • UCAS points - 96-112 points to include a minimum of 2 A levels, or equivalent. (calculate your UCAS points)
  • BTECs (Extended Diplomas) - DMM-MMM
  • International Baccalaureate - 24

You may need to have studied specific subjects or GCSEs - .

English language requirements

  • English language proficiency at a minimum of IELTS band 6.0 with no component score below 5.5.

.

We also accept other standard English tests and qualifications, as long as they meet the minimum requirements of your course.

If you don't meet the English language requirements yet, you can achieve the level you need by successfully completing a pre-sessional English programme before you start your course.

We look at more than just your grades

While we consider your grades when making an offer, we also carefully look at your circumstances and other factors to assess your potential. These include whether you live and work in the region and your personal and family circumstances which we assess using established data.

Careers and opportunities

This degree equips you to make a meaningful impact in areas such as public policy, international relations and social research, preparing you to become an inquisitive, informed citizen and an active participant in civic life.

What areas can you work in with a Politics and Sociology degree?

With a Politics and Sociology degree, you鈥檒l be equipped to make a meaningful impact in society through a wide range of career paths. Your studies will prepare you to work in sectors where critical thinking, communication, and an understanding of political and social systems are highly valued.

You could work in any of the following sectors:

  • Local and central government

  • Civil Service and public administration

  • NGOs and voluntary organisations

  • International organisations (UN, EU)

  • Lobbying and campaigning organisations

  • Public affairs consultancies

  • Law firms and legal services

  • Social care

  • NHS

  • Advertising and PR

  • Marketing

  • Social and market research organisations

  • Education (schools, colleges and universities)

  • Journalism and media

  • Think tanks

  • Accountancy and banking

  • Commercial businesses

What jobs can you do in with a Politics and Sociology degree?

Job prospects from this degree include: 

  • Academic researcher
  • Advice worker
  • Business development manager
  • Civil Service administrator
  • Community development worker
  • Diplomatic service officer
  • Government social research officer
  • Housing manager/officer
  • Human resources officer
  • International aid/development worker
  • Journalist
  • Local government officer
  • Market researcher
  • Marketing executive
  • Police officer
  • Political risk analyst
  • Probation officer
  • Public affairs consultant
  • Public relations officer
  • Social worker
  • Special educational needs coordinator 
  • Teacher
  • Trade union research officer 
  • Youth worker

Placement year (optional)

After the second or third year of your degree, you can do an optional work placement sandwich year, to get valuable longer-term work experience in the industry. 

Recent student placement destinations include: 

  • DSTL (Defence Science and Technology Laboratory)

  • Honda

  • The Houses of Parliament

  • The Royal College of Psychiatrists

  • PARCS (兔子先生 Abuse and Rape Counselling Service)

  • Why Me? Restorative Justice

Some students have even been offered graduate positions with the same organisation after completing their degree.

You could also choose to set up your own business, or take a voluntary placement.

Ongoing career support - up to 5 years after you graduate

Get experience while you study with support to find part-time jobs, volunteering opportunities and work experience. Towards the end of your degree and after graduation, you'll get 1-to-1 support from our Graduate Recruitment Consultancy to find your perfect role.
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Modules

What you'll study

Core modules

You'll learn about key analytical and philosophical concepts and their impact in the way we study politics, the processes by which political demands are articulated, and the mechanisms through which governance deals with those demands. You'll explore how people struggle to solve their problems as individuals, in groups and within political systems. By delving into pressing debates in British politics and beyond, you'l build knowledge and begin to form your own ideas and analysis.

You鈥檒l critique contemporary topics and debates to understand how sociologists make sense of the social world in radically different ways than common assumptions.

As well as reviewing current research and theories, you鈥檒l gain crucial skills you鈥檒l need to succeed in your degree and become an independent, creative thinker.

You'll begin to explore key themes, such as the making of the modern world, war and peace, security, diplomacy, sovereignty, climate change and development, as well as the various ways to conceptualise and analyse these issues.

By the end of the module, you'll have developed a critical understanding of International Relations, gained insights into the historical foundations of the modern world, and engaged with a range of contemporary global issues.

This comprehensive introduction prepares you for further studies and encourages you to question and analyse the complex dynamics of world politics.

You'll explore ideas of human nature, the relationship between individuals and societies, the authority of the state, duties and rights, liberty and freedom, social justice, ethics, war and political violence.

By looking at the ideas of both historical and contemporary thinkers, you'll develop knowledge and understanding of the social and political contexts within which these ideas were developed as well as how they continue to inform our thinking about central issues in politics and international relations today.

On this module, you鈥檒l investigate the structures of power, privilege and inequality that shape society. You鈥檒l examine intersectional perspectives on how gender, race, class and other categories intertwine to limit opportunities 鈥 discussing urgent issues like educational outcomes, discrimination, welfare failures and more.

You'll also explore ideas that challenge the status quo and innovative policies aimed at balancing the scales.

With sociological research as your guide, you'll tackle thought-provoking questions head on: What barriers do people face at school, work and beyond? How do setbacks compound over a lifetime? And what hope exists for creating a truly just world?

Core modules

You'll work as part of a small group with your fellow students, choosing a sociology problem to research and designing a project to investigate it.

You'll work together to create research strategies, collect and analyse data, and share findings - taking your project from idea to completion.

Your research project will help you gain skills in working with others and progressing your work through peer feedback. You'll also learn how sociological research evidence is created and used for different purposes.

You'll learn to apply political theories like intergovernmentalism and supranationalism to real-world issues such as EU enlargement and global influence.

Through case studies and analysis of primary sources, you'll gain the tools to critically assess the EU's evolving role in both European and global politics.

You'll think about what core concepts like freedom truly mean and why they ignite such passion and conflict.

You'll also examine your own assumptions on contested issues like gender, class, race and social justice.

By evaluating ties between visionary ideas and real-world movements, policies and power dynamics, you'll develop nuanced understanding the forces behind political change.

You'll learn about major economic, political and cultural changes in Western Europe over the nineteenth century, and how these affected the rest of the world as time went on.

You'll explore the big ideas that have shaped the modern world, and weigh up the benefits and perils of globalisation. Skills you'll develop on this module include independent research, critical thinking and effective communication.

You'll also learn to understand the opportunities and challenges of today's world from an informed, global perspective.

Optional modules

You'll learn diverse perspectives on formulating and presenting policy, taking into account key variables like leadership, security, and global dynamics.

You'll deploy theories to critically analyse major decisions and their outcomes, strengthening your understanding through case studies of milestone events.

You'll also debate and discuss how policy intersects with national interests and global security, and build skills to explain and evaluate policies coherently.

You'll look at diverse political figures as case studies, exploring their approaches to power, policy, communication, and political popularity.

By delving into leadership theory and interpreting political sources insightfully, you'll learn how to ask thoughtful questions about British politics and meaningfully interpret British political history.

You'll learn to apply political theories like intergovernmentalism and supranationalism to real-world issues such as EU enlargement and global influence.

Through case studies and analysis of primary sources, you'll gain the tools to critically assess the EU's evolving role in both European and global politics.

On this module, you鈥檒l critically analyse the complex economic, political, cultural and environmental impacts of consumption, thinking creatively about alternatives and solutions to the many controversies surrounding consumerism today.

By evaluating theories and research on consumerism, advertising, fashion, credit, debt and more, you鈥檒l develop an insightful understanding of the profound consequences of our consumer lifestyles.

Armed with sociological, feminist and queer theories and real-world examples, you'l discover how gender and sexual norms permeate society and everyday life. You'll examine how we 'do' gender and sexuality through everyday activities, how bodies are policed and categorised, as well as how norms and expectations around gender and sexuality can be and are being resisted and subverted. Paying critical attention to how contemporary societal structures continue to maintain inequality, you'l learn how to engage with and challenge contemporary 'common sense' understandings that we now live in an equal 'post-feminist' society. We'l take a strong intersectional approach, looking at how gender and sexualities intersect with other social categories and positions such as race, age, class and disability.

You'll challenge assumptions about the subjective nature of personal taste as a marker of social class, examining how people make judgments about 'good' and 'bad' taste and how this brings them together and sets them apart. You'll consider whether cultural attitudes have become more tolerant, as well as how culture provides meaning in the world through stories, symbols and sounds. By examining celebrity culture and the attribution of value in society, you'l learn about cultural production and tensions with market forces, individual expression vs societal norms, and cultural appropriation vs appreciation.

You'll look at ideas on industrial employment from key figures in history such as Karl Marx, 脡mile Durkheim and Max Weber, considering how these hold up against today's modern workplaces and economies.

You'll study the ways that workers themselves have shaped employment through fighting and negotiating for their rights. Through class discussions and activities, you'll also develop an understanding of modern sociological ideas about the changing divisions of work, labour and employment, such as Emotional and Aesthetic work.

By the end of the module, you'll be able to explain complex ideas about shifting workplace dynamics and social divisions, and the evolving nature of employment in our rapidly changing world.

You'll analyse factors allowing authoritarian structures and democratic ideals to thrive from the late 20th century onwards.

Through contrasting regions and states, you'll weigh how human rights, media, religion and identities interact with decision-making models balancing control and accountability.

You'll use case studies to assess populism's threat to inclusion and protests resisting dictatorships, and evaluate regimes' resilience against turbulence to determine what foundational conditions best minimise corruption and serve citizens.

You'll engage with key theories and tackle major issues like global inequality, climate change, and shifting power dynamics between regions.

By examining who governs the global economy and in whose interests, you鈥檒l gain the critical tools to understand and analyse today鈥檚 most pressing economic and political challenges.

With a minimum 80-hour commitment, you鈥檒l apply what you鈥檝e learned so far on your degree to real-world professional settings within our community of local businesses, social enterprises, and third-sector organisations.

You鈥檒l have support from interactive workshops, tutorials, and guest speaker events, encouraging you to set achievable professional goals and evolve your professional identity.

You鈥檒l analyse diverse transitional justice approaches balancing community healing and judicial accountability after mass atrocities.

Comparing mechanisms like war crimes tribunals, truth commissions and reparations programmes, you鈥檒l evaluate effectiveness in restoring dignity and preventing recurrence.

With case studies from Europe to Africa, from Latin America to Asia, you'll examine tensions between western models and local cultural perspectives, assessing what 鈥榡ustice鈥 means to vulnerable peoples.

Throughout, you'll trace incremental human rights legislation advances, assessing global institutions鈥 roles protecting civilians from authoritarian regimes and wartime abuses.

You'll explore this question on this module, looking at the uncertainties of our world and how these risks impact our everyday lives. Examine how social institutions shape people's perceptions of risk and how aspects of our own identities, such as class and gender, affect the way we approach risk as individuals.

You'll also have the chance to investigate risk and society in relation to a topic you're most interested in, for example, health, crime or technology.

You'll look critically at corporate, state, technical and consumerist norms within our society, and how these powers-that-be are challenged by resistance from protest movements that highlight the ways society is failing those with the least power.

By investigating historical and modern case studies of revolutions and revolts, you'll think about how we can apply social justice and ethical practices to other societies by generating ideas and developing creative solutions of benefit to society and the economy.

Optional modules

You'll develop a research project which can take many forms, depending on the aims and focus of the dissertation. As an extended project requiring significant levels of critical engagement with subject knowledge, independent research and initiative, ethical research practice, and project management, this module enhances many key areas of knowledge and critical skills.

This real-world, project-based module lets you address an identified need or gap by designing an innovative product, service or resource.

With support from university staff and external partners, you'll demonstrate critical thinking, ethical awareness and project management abilities.

Your final project and presentation will showcase your employability and capacity for high-impact solutions.

You'll tackle questions such as, what is capitalism and in whose interests does it work? Do some models of capitalism work better than others? Can we reconcile capitalist modes of production and consumption with protecting our environment?

Examine relevant political economy theory and open up debates about power, multinational capital, gender, identity and climate crisis.

You'll investigate grassroots campaigners alongside major international NGOs - evaluating their tactics, contributions and accountability.

By probing the relationships between volunteer networks, businesses and government, you'll develop new ideas on what can and cannot be achieved by public advocacy. Do civil society organisations challenge or reinforce the prevailing world order?

You'll examine three pivotal themes: the lead-up to and aftermath of the UK's EU referendum, the evolving dynamics of post-Brexit politics, and the shifting global role of the UK, Europe and the EU.

Throughout the module, you'll explore visual aspects of Brexit politics, key policy shifts and the roles of major political players in areas like immigration, foreign and security strategies, and party politics.

On this module, you鈥檒l critically analyse the complex economic, political, cultural and environmental impacts of consumption, thinking creatively about alternatives and solutions to the many controversies surrounding consumerism today.

By evaluating theories and research on consumerism, advertising, fashion, credit, debt and more, you鈥檒l develop an insightful understanding of the profound consequences of our consumer lifestyles.

Considering diverse theories from sociology, feminist and queer studies, you'll evaluate everyday 'common sense' ideas alongside norms that police our bodies and behaviours.

You'll examine how today's societal structures continue to maintain inequality, building your ability to question assumptions, identify bias and pursue equity across intersections of race, age, class and more.

You'll challenge assumptions about the subjective nature of personal taste as a marker of social class, examining how people make judgments about 'good' and 'bad' taste and how this brings them together and sets them apart.

You'll consider whether cultural attitudes have become more tolerant, as well as how culture provides meaning in the world through stories, symbols and sounds.

By examining celebrity culture and the attribution of value in society, you'll learn about cultural production and tensions with market forces, individual expression vs societal norms, and cultural appropriation vs appreciation.

You'll consider schools of thought from socialism to transhumanism, thinking about how they have created social movements that lasted decades.

By applying diverse ideological lenses to different ideas about human progress, you'll weigh up the insights and limits of utopian and dystopian thought in relation to how societies understand and address the challenges facing humanity in the twenty first century.

You'll evaluate diverse cases of religion intertwining with critical issues like nationalism, peacebuilding, violence and more.

Discussing the perspectives of policymakers to extremists, you'll tackle intriguing questions head on.

How do religious ideas still drive political agendas worldwide? How does faith unite communities yet fuel divisions? And could rediscovering religion's role in human life hold keys to solving global problems?

You'll rethink European (market) integration from the perspective of state, non-state, and regional actors across the globe, focusing on the question of how and to what extent EU institutions and policies have contributed to shaping international economic governance.

Tackling different interpretations of the EU as a regional and global power, you'll explore though-provoking questions: As the EU negotiates new trade deals and economic partnerships, who really benefits? Does the EU attempt to use its global market power to create a safer world? And to what extent have colonial legacies shaped the EU as an economic superpower?

You鈥檒l consider the growth of interest in emotions in sociology, and examines their role in classical sociological theory. Working in groups and workshops, you鈥檒l weigh up debates on emotional life and apply them to real examples.

You鈥檒l also explore sociological approaches to a range of distinct emotions, as well as the rise of therapy and self-help culture in contemporary western society.

On this module, you鈥檒l explore radical frameworks for understanding and eradicating intersectional oppression. We'll analyse different ways of challenging injustices, from interrupting homophobic microaggressions to disrupting the social impacts of global issues like the climate crisis.

You'll learn about how ideas like feminism, anti-racism and inclusive education can challenge domineering structures like capitalism, racism and patriarchy. You鈥檒l examine the politics of knowledge itself alongside ideas that empower the disadvantaged.

You'll examine key theories and research methodologies for understanding personal life, relationships, sexuality and generational change.

You'll have the opportunity to pursue topics matching your interests, whether that's shifts in dating cultures, new family forms, LGBTQ identities, or issues like consent, respect and ethics.

The module develops critical thinking skills by evaluating different frameworks and perspectives on contemporary intimacy and relationships. There is an emphasis on inclusivity, diversity, and social justice throughout.

Optional modules

During your study abroad year, you鈥檒l expand your global perspective and develop additional skills to boost your future career, as well as making memories, new friends and career contacts.

You could also improve your foreign language and intercultural communication skills. This is an amazing opportunity to expand your horizons and set yourself up for your future career by studying abroad and becoming a student ambassador for our university.

We'll help you find and secure a work placement that inspires you in a destination you can explore and make home during your placement year.

You'll have the chance to try out skills and gain experience that'll help you clarify your next career steps, while building capabilities employers seek and applying what you've learned on your degree so far to a real-world working environment.

Return feeling confident and re-energised for your final year or first year of your career, ready to make an immediate impact in whatever you choose to do next.

How you'll spend your time

What will I get up to?

On this course, you鈥檒l spend your time reading, thinking critically, writing, and completing coursework assessments designed to develop and showcase your skills. You鈥檒l work both independently and collaboratively鈥攕haring ideas, tackling group projects, and developing presentations. Your learning experience will be enriched through real-world connections with practitioners, employers, and community members via opportunities such as our Academic Enrichment programme, Employer on Campus events, and student-led initiatives like Model UN and Question Time-style events with local politicians.

You鈥檒l complete a wide range of assessments tailored to your interests, from essays and policy briefs to podcasts, websites, and short videos. You鈥檒l also have the opportunity to co-design aspects of your assessment鈥攑articularly your final-year research project鈥攁llowing you to explore topics you鈥檙e passionate about while developing practical, transferable skills.

 

Term dates

The academic year runs from September to June. There are breaks at Christmas and Easter.

See term dates

Supporting you

The amount of timetabled teaching you'll get on your degree might be less than what you're used to at school or college, but you'll also get support via video, phone and face-to-face from teaching and support staff to enhance your learning experience and help you succeed. You can build your personalised network of support from the following people and services:

Types of support

Your personal tutor helps you make the transition to independent study and gives you academic and personal support throughout your time at university.

As well as regular scheduled meetings with your personal tutor, they're also available at set times during the week if you want to chat with them about anything that can't wait until your next meeting.

You'll have help from a team of faculty learning development tutors. They can help you improve and develop your academic skills and support you in any area of your study.

They can help with:

  • Improving your academic writing (for example, essays, reports, dissertations)
  • Delivering presentations (including observing and filming presentations)
  • Understanding and using assignment feedback
  • Managing your time and workload
  • Revision and exam techniques

During term time, Faculty Academic Skills Tutors (AST) are available for bookable 1-to-1 sessions, small group sessions and online sessions. These sessions are tailored to your needs.

Support is available for skills including:

  • University study
  • Getting into the right study mindset
  • Note-taking and note-making skills
  • Referencing
  • Presentation skills
  • Time management, planning, and goal setting
  • Critical thinking
  • Avoiding plagiarism

If you have a disability or need extra support, the Additional Support and Disability Centre (ASDAC) will give you help, support and advice.

Our online  will help you plan for managing the challenges of learning and student life, so you can fulfil your potential and have a great student experience.

You can get personal, emotional and mental health support from our Student Wellbeing Service, in person and online. This includes 1鈥2鈥1 support as well as courses and workshops that help you better manage stress, anxiety or depression.

If you require extra support because of a disability or additional learning need our specialist team can help you.

They'll help you to

  • discuss and agree on reasonable adjustments
  • liaise with other University services and facilities, such as the library
  • access specialist study skills and strategies tutors, and assistive technology tutors, on a 1-to-1 basis or in groups
  • liaise with external services

Library staff are available in person or by email, phone, or online chat to help you make the most of the University鈥檚 library resources. You can also request one-to-one appointments and get support from a librarian who specialises in your subject area.

The library is open 24 hours a day, every day, in term time.

If English isn't your first language, you can do one of our English language courses to improve your written and spoken English language skills before starting your degree. Once you're here, you can take part in our free In-Sessional English (ISE) programme to improve your English further.

Course costs and funding

Tuition fees

  • UK, Channel Islands and Isle of Man students 鈥 拢9,535 a year (may be subject to annual increase)
  • EU students 鈥 拢9,535 a year (including Transition Scholarship 鈥 (may be subject to annual increase)
  • International students 鈥 拢17,200 a year (subject to annual increase)

Please note, we'll confirm 2026 course fees soon.

Apply

Ready to apply?

To start this course in 2025, apply through UCAS. You'll need:

  • the UCAS course code 鈥 L380
  • our institution code 鈥 P80

If you'd prefer to apply directly, use our .

You can also sign up to an Open Day to:

  • Tour our campus, facilities and halls of residence
  • Speak with lecturers and chat with our students 
  • Get information about where to live, how to fund your studies and which clubs and societies to join

If you're new to the application process, read our guide on applying for an undergraduate course.

To start this course in 2026, apply through UCAS. You'll need:

  • the UCAS course code 鈥 L380
  • our institution code 鈥 P80

If you'd prefer to apply directly, use our .

You can also sign up to an Open Day to:

  • Tour our campus, facilities and halls of residence
  • Speak with lecturers and chat with our students 
  • Get information about where to live, how to fund your studies and which clubs and societies to join

If you're new to the application process, read our guide on applying for an undergraduate course.

Admissions terms and conditions

When you accept an offer to study at the 兔子先生, you also agree to abide by our Student Contract (which includes the University's relevant policies, rules and regulations). You should read and consider these before you apply.

Finalising this course

All our courses go through a rigorous approval process to make sure they鈥檙e of the highest quality. This includes a review by a panel of experts, made up of academic staff and an external academic or professional with specialist knowledge.

This course is in the final stages of this process and is open for applications. If any details of the course or its approval status change after you apply, we鈥檒l let you know as soon as possible and will be here to discuss your options with you.