Bachelor of Arts in Gender Studies / Bachelor of Criminology (Dual Degree)

Monash University - Clayton Campus

Australia,Victoria

 0 Shortlist

48 Months

Duration

CAD 42,100/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 100

Application Fee

Jul 2025

Apply Date

Australia, Victoria

Type: University

Location Type: Urban

Founded: 1958

Total Students: 30,000 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

Wellington Rd, Clayton VIC 3800, Australia

Bachelor of Arts in Gender Studies / Bachelor of Criminology (Dual Degree)

Program Overview

The Bachelor of Arts allows you to choose from over forty areas of study, and to develop the research skills, advanced discipline knowledge and self-reliance to acquire information, assess evidence and convey complex ideas.

Criminology is the study of crime and social control. It is concerned with the context, construction and causes of what we know as crime, as well as prevention, response and reform measures. It examines crime committed by individuals, groups, organisations and states, both locally and internationally and includes the study of policing, criminal law and processes of punishment within national and international justice systems. It interrogates diverse formal and informal practices and systems of justice and regulation. Monash criminology is internationally renowned for its global focus. We are concerned with crimes and social harms that cause widespread concern including those perpetrated by states and organisations, during war and conflict and in transitional societies. Monash criminologists are researching and producing new empirical and theoretical knowledge, setting the agenda for local, national and international responses to issues of crime that impact large numbers of people.


Major: Gender Studies
Gender studies is an exciting interdisciplinary field of inquiry that’s informed by the belief that all social processes and institutions are ‘gendered’.

Studies in this area bring innovative theory and research techniques to understanding the ways in which our bodies are sexed, gendered and sexually oriented, how these relate to contemporary and global debates on gender inequality, sexual and reproductive health and rights, and the plurality of sexualities.