Clearing contact details
Admissions Office
Email:admissions@aru.ac.uk
Phone:01245 686868
Course contact details
Anglia Ruskin University
Email:answers@aru.ac.uk
Phone:01245 683680
Anglia Ruskin University
East Road
Cambridge
CB1 1PT
Jump-start your career in the criminal justice sector with our specialist Policing and Criminology degree in Chelmsford.
Explore the English legal and criminal justice systems, including the police, courts, prisons, probation, and youth justice system.
You’ll discover the origins, ethos, and legal and ethical frameworks of the system, and complex issues such as media representation, public attitudes and the impact of crime on victims and offenders.
You’ll also pick up key skills like research methods and investigative psychology, and take an in-depth look at recruitment processes in the sector - ensuring you’re ready for professional life when you graduate.
Learn from staff with real-world experience, including active and former policing and criminal justice practitioners.
Get hands-on with the latest case studies and research, field trips, and a optional placement year.
Build your network and find work placements, through our links to organisations including police forces.
Attend events organised by our International Policing and Public Protection Research Institute.
Join a university at the forefront of shaping cultural change in uniformed services, with our record £11million research grant.
Hear from key criminal justice professionals, attend employment fairs, and build a portfolio and CV.
Careers
Work towards your career goals from day one, with opportunities to get involved in research, events and campaigns.
We’ll support you to get involved in justice causes, charities and voluntary work that contributes to civic duty so you can gain relevant experience in the criminal justice system. You’ll also boost your CV as you become proficient in critical analysis, research and communication.
Engage with professionals through guest lectures (including those organised by our International Policing and Public Protection Research Institute), workshop events, study trips and research projects.
You could also develop a specialism or start a career in research by taking part in our academic shadowing scheme or Cambridgeshire County Council’s violence prevention analysis programmes.
You’ll be well-equipped for a career in a number of public services, such as the probation service, prison service, police, the Home Office, Crown Prosecution Service, the Court Service, youth offending teams, crime reduction partnerships.
The multidisciplinary nature of this course, and its focus on employability and transferable skills, can also open doors for you elsewhere, for example in adult guidance work, charity work, counselling, local government, political analysis, and legal careers.
You might decide to stay at ARU to study for a Masters, such as our MA Contemporary Policing, MA Criminology or MA International Relations. Take advantage of our Alumni Scholarship and get 20% off your fees.
Teaching
Prepare for a role as a criminal justice professional, by exploring the key elements of England’s criminal justice system (police, courts, prisons, probation, and youth justice) as well as current issues in criminology.
You'll also consider the impact of crime on victims and offenders and the relationships between media, technology, and crime, as well as discovering research methods that will allow you to take your skills into the real world.
Finally you’ll learn more about the youth justice system and investigative psychology, and pool your learning in a research project of your choice.
Year 1: Foundation in Law and Policing.
Year 2 core modules: Introduction to Policing; Introduction to Contemporary Issues in Criminology; Criminal Justice in England and Wales; Policing Practice; Into ARU.
Year 3 core modules: Researching Society and Culture; Violence and Confrontation; Victims of Crime; Crime, Media and Technology; Crime and Data Science; Ruskin Module.
Year 4 core modules: Undergraduate Major Project - Criminology; Youth, Crime and Aggression; Becoming a Criminal Justice Professional; Investigative Psychology; Criminology and Policing in Policy and Practice; Crimes of the Powerful; Exploitation, Trafficking and Sexual Violence.
Modules are subject to change and availability.
You’ll show your progress using a range of methods that will prepare you for professional life, including essays, portfolios, problem-solving activities, case studies, blogs, policy documents, presentations, and a major research project.
The following entry points are available for this course:
5 GCSEs at grade D, or grade 3, or above and evidence of two years post-GCSE study at Level 3.
If you have achieved at least grade E in one A level, or equivalent, you are exempt from the two years post-GCSE study requirement, but you still must meet the GCSE requirements.
Applicants who do not meet the two years post GCSE study at level 3 may be considered based on their satisfactory employment history, which must be a minimum of two years full time employment supported by employer evidence and deemed appropriate by the University for meeting the course of study applied for.
| Test | Grade | Additional details |
|---|---|---|
| IELTS (Academic) | 5.5 | With minimum 5.5 in each component |
This section shows the range of grades that students who received offers were previously accepted on to this course with (learn more).
It is designed to support your research but does not guarantee whether you will or won't get a place.
Admissions teams consider various factors, including interviews, subject requirements, and entrance tests. Check all course entry requirements for eligibility.
We are unable to show previous accepted grades for this course. This could be because the course is new, it's a postgraduate course, there isn't enough historical data, or the provider has opted out of sharing their entry grades data for this course - learn more.
This report uses your grades to show how students with similar results have done when applying to this course in the past. Sometimes, there isn’t data for every possible set of grades. When that happens, universities and colleges occasionally fill in the gaps for sets of grades that are typically accepted.
| Location | Fee | Year |
|---|
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website.
https://aru.ac.uk/student-life/preparing-for-university/help-with-finances/undergraduate
https://www.aru.ac.uk/study/tuition-fees
Email:admissions@aru.ac.uk
Phone:01245 686868
Email:answers@aru.ac.uk
Phone:01245 683680
East Road
Cambridge
CB1 1PT
At Anglia Ruskin University