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Bachelor of Criminology/Bachelor of Forensic Science

University of Technology Sydney

CRICOS provider number: 00099F TEQSA provider ID: PRV12060

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^ These tuition fees will remain current for the calendar year of commencement but may increase in subsequent years. The University reserves the right to review its overall fee position without notice. Student fees are calculated on the basis of the exact enrolment. The fees listed are indicative only and may vary due to enrolment choices. For example, where elective subjects are taken from a faculty other than the student’s host faculty, individual subject costs may vary.

About

The double degree of Bachelor of Criminology/Bachelor of Forensic Science prepares students to respond to the changing nature of crime and justice in the 21st century by addressing the realities of crime and forensics in an increasingly digital and transnational age. Students develop a skill set that combines the natural sciences and social sciences providing an in-depth understanding of forensic science, crime and justice in the context of their chosen specialisations in the course.

This course provides students with a thorough understanding of how forensic science and criminology complement each other whilst retaining their individual identities as two seperate disciplines.  Yes, how, when combined Forensic Science and Criminology can solve and prevent crime. This is a hands-on course using world-class facilities that are modelled on operational laboratories. The aim is to produce professional forensic scientists with highly adaptable scientific skills accompanied by a thorough grounding in criminological and social theory, methods and practice. This is a well-regarded course with strong links to industries such as the federal and state police services, national and international forensic institutions, and government laboratories.

The aim is to produce professional forensic scientists with highly adaptable scientific skills accompanied by a thorough grounding in social theory, methods and practice. This is a well-regarded course with strong links to industries such as the federal and state police services, national and international forensic institutions, and government laboratories.

Areas of study

Criminology, cyber security, law, justice, forensics, crime prevention, digital skills.

Career opportunities

Police officer, law enforcement agent, corrections officer, border force officer, customs officer, crime prevention analyst, policy analyst, community justice/development worker, government worker, evaluator, cyber security analyst, fraud prevention analyst, digital fraud prevention analyst, intelligence officer, ICT security specialist, security consultant.

Chemistry major: Criminalist, trace evidence specialist, explosive specialist, analytical chemist, toxicologist, clinical or regulatory toxicologist, analytical technician.

Biology major: DNA specialist, forensic scientist, molecular research scientist, hospital scientist, pathology technician, forensic anthropologist, forensic pathology technician.

Crime scene investigation major: Scene-of-crime officer, team leader in investigations, fire investigator, trace evidence specialist, forensic scientist, analyst.

Digital forensics major: Digital forensic scientist or analyst, e-Discovery analyst, cyberthreat intelligence analyst, fraud investigator, information security analyst, malware analyst.

Fees and charges

Refer to UTS current fee information.

Admission criteria

Applicants with recent secondary education

Assumed knowledge: Any two units of English, Mathematics Advanced, any 2 units of Science (Biology and Chemistry recommended).

Other applicants

Refer to the UTS general admission criteria.

Student profile

Access information about the background of students in this course.

Further information

View all details of this course on the UTS website.

Course updates
Courses are added and cancelled throughout the admissions year and course details are subject to change. Check the UAC course search regularly.

UTS Online Handbook
For further details about UTS courses listed below, including course content and structure, subject and elective choices, attendance patterns and credit point requirements, visit the UTS Online Handbook.

UTS cross-faculty and combined courses
UTS offers many cross-faculty courses and combined courses in the areas of Arts and Social Sciences, Business, Design, Engineering and Information Technology, Health, Law and Science.

UTS also offers a Bachelor of Creative Intelligence and Innovation (BCII), a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies and a Bachelor of Sustainability and Environment as combined degrees. TD School at UTS also offers a unique future-focused Diploma in Innovation that can be completed in parallel with almost any Bachelor degree and double degree, except BCII. Diploma enrolment is by direct application once at UTS.