THE SOCIAL AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE CONCENTRATION ON SOCIOLOGY MAJOR
B.A. and B.S. degrees
A Concentration in Social and Criminal Justice on the Sociology major consists of 42 hours of course work. No more than 3 credit hours of courses taken from CR/NC can be counted toward the major. SOC 525 Internship in Social & Criminal Justice exhausts the 3 hour limit.
Advisors: Spring 2007
Brian Smith
Anspach 125
(989) 774-3428
Mensah Adinkrah
Anspach 126
(989) 774-3367
Core Courses (18 hours)
Additional Required Courses (21 hours)
Elective Courses (3 hours)
*May be applied only when the special topic pertains to a social and criminal justice related area
Total: 42 semester hours
SOC 300 and SOC 301 cannot be taken on a Credit/No Credit basis. A grade of C (2.0) or better must be earned in SOC 300 and in SOC 301. No more than three hours of course work can be taken on a Credit/No Credit basis for the sociology major with a social and criminal justice concentration, not including courses that are only offered with this grading option. No more than 15 hours of coursework can transfer to the sociology major with a social and criminal justice concentration from another institution.
NOTE: Students must earn a grade of C (2.0) or better in SOC 200 in order to continue with SOC 350.
Social and Criminal Justice Concentration,
Sociology Major
Cognate Areas of Study
The Concentration in Social and Criminal Justice within the Sociology major prepares
students to carefully analyze criminal justice processes, with an emphasis on
community-based responses to offenders and victims. Students should learn not only how
justice agencies and the law work, but why and with what consequences. The concentration
emphasizes the development of communication and reasoning skills and fosters understanding
of the relationship between criminal justice and other social institutions.
Criminal justice advisors can assist students in assessing their individual strengths and making an appropriate selection of minors, University Program courses, and other areas of study so as to complement these strengths and develop a wider understanding of social processes.
Careers in Social and Criminal Justice
Sociology/criminal justice prepares students to make civic contributions as thoughtful,
informed citizens and to engage in life-long learning. It also prepares them for a variety
of entry-level jobs in probation, parole, alternative sentencing and diversion programs,
day treatment programs, and community mediation, as well as social justice organizing
efforts. The program stresses a critical sociological perspective on social control and
justice, together with service learning. This combination leads to work supporting healthy
alternatives to the currently dominant approaches to controlling crime.
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Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work
Anspach Hall 142
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, Michigan 48859
(989) 774-3160
Fax: (989) 774-1844
CMU (an AA/EO institution) encourages diversity and resolves to provide
equal opportunity regardless of race, sex, disability, sexual orientation, or other
irrelevant criteria.
The information on this page is maintained by R. Kirk.
Other questions should be directed to: webmeister@chsbs.cmich.edu
Document Revision Date: July 7, 2005.