Nov 24, 2024  
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog

Criminology Minor


Admission Criteria


Current UB students seeking admission to the Criminology minor should complete the College of Arts and Sciences Major/Minor Change Request Form.

Course Requirements


Criminology Core (6 credits)


Notes


*May count SOC 495  once, for 3 credits, as an elective course

Total Credits Required for Minor: 18


Total Credit Hours Required represents the minimum credits needed to complete this program, and may vary based on a number of circumstances. This chart should not be used for financial aid purposes.

Academic Requirements


Minimum GPA of 2.000 overall.

Minimum grade of C required in SOC 206 SOC 307 , or approved substitutes.

Sociology Department Course Overlap Policy

For Sociology and/or Criminology majors also minoring in a departmental minor, and/or for double minors, a minimum of 4 of the classes required for the minor must be unique, i.e., not shared across other departmental majors or minors.

Transfer Credit Policy

The department accepts up to 9 credit hours of appropriate sociology/criminology courses toward the minor requirements. Course descriptions and syllabi may need to be provided.

Program Distinction


A student in this major is eligible for Program Distinction upon degree conferral if the criteria are met. Criteria are found under Academic Honors in the Policy and Procedure section of this Catalog. Program Distinction is noted on the official transcript.

Learning Outcomes


Upon completion of the Minor in Criminology, students should be able to:

  • Think critically and sociologically about crime and criminality;
  • Identify and understand the theories, methods, and findings of key research conducted by criminologists;
  • Understand causal theories of crime, deviance, and/or juvenile delinquency, and the issues related to defining, measuring, and explaining crime, deviance, and/or delinquency;
  • Identify and challenge popular misconceptions about crime and understand how and why they are perpetuated;
  • Understand how social inequality, including class, race, and gender inequalities, relate to crime and criminality;
  • Understand how criminological theories are applied in everyday social life, especially in law and social policy;
  • Know how to acquire and evaluate data associated with crime and justice issues, and acquire the skills needed to assess the validity and reliability of such data.