There is a more recent version of this academic item available.

Overview

This Handbook is for commencing students. If you commenced in a prior year please refer to the Online Handbook in the year you started your Law degree or contact the Faculty of Law for advice. This program provides students with an opportunity to obtain two degrees of professional importance to … For more content click the Read More button below. The Bachelor of Criminology & Criminal Justice (BCCJ) is an innovative and interdisciplinary field of study with a real world focus designed to explore your interests in crime, deviance, social control and the legal system. Contemporary criminological scholars investigate a broad range of topics including justice, conflict, risk, security, policing, state crime, alternative justice systems, criminalisation and regulation. Key concerns include the nature of crime, how crime is defined and measured, why people commit crime and how societies might respond. Criminologists tackle 'real world' social problems including victimisation, juvenile justice, drug-related harm, community safety, indigenous justice, organised crime and corrections. Criminology is shaped by scholars in law, philosophy, psychology and sociology, and other interdisciplinary fields including history, politics, economics, architecture, and cultural studies. The UNSW BCCJ also provides you with the skills of applied social research and policy analysis.

Stand Alone Programs

Click on the link below to find out more about each individual program.

Double Degree Structure
240 Units of Credit:

Students must complete 240 UOC.

1. Law compulsory courses - 96 UOC
2. Prescribed law elective - 6 UOC
3. Law elective courses - 42 UOC
4. Criminology Core - 36 UOC
5. Social Research and Policy Core - 42 UOC
6. Prescribed Criminology Electives - 18 UOC

  • 4763 - Criminology & Criminal Justice / Law
  • 3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice
  • 4701 - Law

Level 1 Criminology Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Level 1 Social Research and Policy Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Students must take 12 UOC of the following courses.

Level 2 Criminology Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Students must take 18 UOC of the following courses.

Note: Students enrolled in the dual award Criminology and Criminal Justice/Law (4763) complete LAWS1021 and LAWS1022 and are excluded from CRIM2020 and CRIM2021. Students should enrol in substitute Criminology Prescribed electives at Level 2.

Level 2 Social Research and Policy Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Students must take 12 UOC of the following courses.

Level 3 Criminology Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Students must take 6 UOC of the following courses.

Note: Dual-degree Social Work/Criminology students are not eligible to enrol in CRIM3025.

Level 3 Social Research and Policy Core Courses
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Law Electives
4701 - Law

Students must complete 42 UOC of Law Electives.

Note: With the permission of the Director of Undergraduate Studies and the course teacher, undergraduate students may enrol in one or more Postgraduate courses, in a select list of approved Postgraduate Electives. Not more than half the students' total elective courses may be taken from the postgraduate offerings.

Capstone Maturity Requirements
3422 - Criminology & Criminal Justice

Students must have completed 72 UOC before taking any of the following courses.

Nura Gili Pre-Law Program
4701 - Law

Indigenous students who have entered the Bachelor of Law program through the Nura Gili Pre-Law program must complete the following two courses (6 UOC):- LAWS1213 Foundations Enrichment 1 (3 UOC)- LAWS1214 Foundations Enrichment 2 (3 UOC)These courses are taken in place of 6 UOC of electives and are not available … For more content click the Read More button below.

Program Fees

At UNSW fees are generally charged at course level and therefore dependent upon individual enrolment and other factors such as student's residency status. For generic information on fees and additional expenses of UNSW programs, click on one of the following:

Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)