Minor in Criminology
The criminology minor affords students the opportunity to analyze how society defines, regulates and seeks to prevent criminal behavior as well as considering what factors lead people to commit crimes.
Courses address the role of systemic inequality and state violence in relation to crime. Students select courses from multiple social scientific disciplines including sociology, anthropology, political science, psychology and indigenous, race and ethnic studies to gain an understanding of the nature of crime, including the social and cultural factors contributing to criminal behavior and institutional efforts to prevent it. They also gain skills in analyzing evidence as well as identifying, apprehending and rehabilitating perpetrators.
Minor in Criminology
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Required Core Courses: | 16 | |
Introduction to Sociology | ||
Power, Politics, and Inequality | ||
Introduction: Deviance, Control, and Crime | ||
Introduction to Forensic Anthropology | ||
Electives: 1 | 20 | |
Advanced Forensic Anthropology 2 | ||
Restorative Justice | ||
Conflicts of Incarceration | ||
Social Equity and Criminal Justice | ||
Race and Incarceration | ||
Prevention of Youth Violence | ||
Legal Process: An Introduction to the American Judiciary | ||
Race, Politics, and the Law | ||
Civil Rights in Post-Warren Era | ||
Civil Rights and Civil Liberties | ||
Introduction to Public Law | ||
Psychopathology | ||
Culture and Mental Health | ||
Urban Sociology | ||
Issues in Deviance, Control, and Crime: [Topic] | ||
Total Credits | 36 |
1 | Up to 4 credits of internship or practicum can be applied towards the minor. |
2 | ANTH 176 and ANTH 473 must be taken in sequence if ANTH 473 is selected as an elective. |