Developed in collaboration with New South Wales Police Force, the course fulfils the academic requirements for employment with them. Graduates seeking employment will be required to meet the entry standards of NSW Police Force on a competitive basis, for example in relation to fitness and other aspects of professional suitability.
Students demonstrating successful completion of relevant studies at other tertiary institutions prior to enrolment may be granted advanced standing for those studies, in accordance with current UWS policy.
Applications from Australian citizens and holders of permanent resident visas must be made via the Universities Admissions Centre.
Applicants who have undertaken studies overseas may have to provide proof of proficiency in English. Local and International applicants who are applying through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC) will find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UAC website. Local applicants applying directly to UWS should also use the information provided on the UAC website.
International applicants must apply directly to the University of Western Sydney via the UWS Internaional office.
International students applying to UWS through UWS International can find details of minimum English proficiency requirements and acceptable proof on the UWS International website.
http://sites.uws.edu.au/international
Qualification for this award requires the successful completion of 240 credit points including the units listed in the recommended sequence below.
Organisations, Communities and Communication
Note: The unit offerings for the 1H Teaching Period at Bankstown and Penrith campuses listed above are available only for students enrolled in course 1670 - Bachelor of Education (Birth - 5 years). Please note that enrolments will be monitored and students who are not enrolled in course 1670 will be required to withdraw from 1H and enrol in one of the alternative Teaching Periods listed above. This introductory unit provides foundational skills and knowledge required for professional practice in a range of social science related careers in which working with and as part of communities is essential. With an emphasis on practical understanding through both team-work and fieldwork it introduces students to a range of skills in interpersonal and written communication, and to community and organisational processes and structures. It enables students to identify issues of change; conflicting and collaborative interests; participation and collaboration. It provides practical experience in working with others to achieve shared objectives with mechanisms for goal setting, issues identification, information and resource sharing that operate in everyday life and all professional contexts.
Understanding Society is a core unit offered by the School of Social Sciences and Psychology which will introduce students in the first year of their studies to key concepts and theories used in examination of and for understanding social action, social policy, social institutions, social structure and social change. Students enrolled in the unit will be introduced to factual information concerning contemporary societies and the methods of interpreting such information. At the conclusion of their studies in this unit students will have been presented with opportunities to develop skills in critical reading and sociological analysis.
Introduction to Crime and Criminal Justice
The definition of particular social problems as crimes, how crime is measured and explained and who are identified as criminals or victims is not straightforward. This unit challenges the commonsense view that accepts at face value that crime can be defined by criminal law or by a conceptual analysis of the harm done. With a discussion of fundamental elements of institutions and practices the unit examines how police, courts and corrections influence processes of criminalisation and victimisation and the societal context in which this occurs.
Theories and Concepts of Policing
This unit describes, explains and analyses the role and function of police from a social, historical and comparative perspective as well as different policing practices in Australia and other nations. It will address issues including the structure, roles, and reform of police, social diversity and community relations and debates about distinct policing strategies and their social impact. Students will explore the relevance of policing theories and concepts to contemporary issues and culture.
The Geographies of Social Difference
This unit focuses on the local experiences of cultural and socio-economic difference. This includes applied social science approaches to inequality, diversity, community, sense of place, and environmental sustainability in the urban setting. There is an emphasis upon spatial literacy for social scientists (fieldwork, mapping, data analysis and place description).
This unit introduces the main theoretical perspectives for understanding the 'individual in society', including biological, cognitive, behavioural and personality explanations of individual behaviour. Students are guided and encouraged to explore relevance to everyday life and contemporary issues. Once established, these theories are extended to understanding individuals in society using a bio-psycho-social framework. Theoretical stances related to 'levels of explanation', 'individualism vs collectivism' and 'personality vs situation' are explored as are topics such as social cognition; social influence, and social relations, for example, social identity, prejudice, aggression, pro-social behaviours, attitude formation and change and relationships.
This unit introduces major approaches within criminology offering explanations of the causes of crime, with consideration of the impact of such other fields as sociology and ethnography. Its scope ranges from classicism and positivism to the rise of social perspectives in the twentieth century including the Chicago school, strain theory, labelling, Marxism and left realism, feminism, governmentality, risk theory and critical criminology. Final consideration will be given to psychosocial approaches to crime, and the revival of free will and rationality in neo-liberal analyses. These traditions and perspectives will be illustrated by consideration of key research examples.
This unit concentrates on the implications for police practice of the legislative framework, police responsibilities including procedures, practices and methods. The content will focus on police decision-making and discretion, and the meaning and practice of police powers. The approach necessary for working with diverse communities is described, analysed and critiqued, as are associated communication practices. Concepts such as the appropriate use of force, the appropriate use of personal information and the proper management of serious and fatal incidents are debated and critiqued. By comparison, examples are drawn from Australian state and federal policing, and international contexts.
This unit introduces students to the nature of western ethics and moral discourses, to ethical methodology and to the possibilities and limits of ethical discourse and practice. It covers the history of the formalisation of ethics as well as its current philosophical and sociological dimensions. It also deals with various case studies of ethical issues and moral debates students may encounter in their everyday day and professional lives. Students will be invited to reflect on moral discourse(s) and on the use of ethics for social justice and fairness.
This unit develops an understanding of the complexity of juvenile crime by addressing the historical, political, cultural and socio-economic factors associated with youth crime, constructions of youth, and, governmental strategies for regulating and preventing juvenile crime. An inter-disciplinary framework is used to develop a critical appreciation of the impacts of the regulation of particular youth groups that are over-represented in the juvenile justice system, including Aboriginal youth and other racial/ethnic minority youth. Lastly, the unit will critically assess a range of official interventions for working with young people within the juvenile justice system.
Legislation, Courts and Policing
This unit introduces students to the adversarial system, the legislative context of everyday policing, and the different forms of state and federal courts. It includes an emphasis on police powers (NSW and elsewhere), summary and indictable offences, and the role of enforcement and discretion. In particular alternative resolution, specialist courts and Australian Indigenous Law are described and their role and function analysed. This unit is of value to students in policing, criminology, law, and community welfare.
And one elective
This unit will focus on understanding the research process from its epistemological and theoretical underpinnings through to designing a research proposal. Students will develop a reflexive and informed approach to the research process and the applications of research in the social sciences. Research ethics and the applications of research will be examined and students will have the opportunity to develop a research plan as the basis for unit 101552 - Applied Social Research.
Evidence, Investigations and Police Intelligence
This unit aims to provide an overview to police investigations with a specific focus on the use of physical and behavioural types of evidence, in the context of information-based investigative practices. The lectures will consider the objectives and history of investigation and forensic science, the impact of science on criminal law, modes of criminal identification, information-gathering, as well as criminal motivation and victimology. Specific investigative challenges - such as responding to serial crimes and international criminal networks - are also considered in this unit as they defy traditional investigative methods to produce innovative responses. The unit includes both theoretical and practical perspectives relating to evidence in order to situate criminal investigations in a larger historical, social and legal context. The tutorials will adopt a workshop approach to assist students to engage with and critically evaluate contemporary criminal investigations.
Victimisation and Crime Prevention
This unit will examine historical, theoretical and research material regarding victimisation from crime and the possible means to prevent this. The criminal justice acknowledgment of victims will be analysed in relation to the growth of victim studies, evidence about unreported crime, fear of crime and the relation between patterns of victimisation and social disadvantage. Additionally, the unit will critically focus on contemporary state initiatives to assist victims, lobbying on behalf of specific groups, and how these compare and contrast with the more innovative means of responding to victimisation in both public and private spheres with crime prevention strategies.
And one elective
During the 2nd year of the Bachelor of Policing degree students who wish to join the NSWPF will be required to undertake two units referred to as 1a, 1b, and an 80 hour placement. It is expected that those students will meet the UWS required academic and NSW Police professional suitability (PSA) requirements. Session 1 (1a and 1b) are considered to be distance learning subjects, which inclusive of the placement are administered by CSU. With regards to 1a and 1b, there are minor residential requirements that take place at the Goulburn Police College over several weekends during Autumn and Spring Semester of Year 2. UWS will facilitate all of these requirements with CSU and the NSWPF during the second year. In conclusion, the second year of the NSW Police Pathway of course 1662 - Bachelor of Policing, involves study requirements at UWS in conjunction with distance learning and placement requirements administered by CSU.
In the 3rd year of the UWS Bachelor of Policing degree students will complete Session 2 as a full time residential student at Charles Sturt University. At the completion of Session 2, students will be awarded block credit of 80 credit points towards course 1662 - Bachelor of Policing.
This unit will focus students on the challenges and issues in undertaking research through the completion of a small research project. Students will have the opportunity to apply their learning from 400337 Social Research Methods to the completion of an applied research project. Through the process of planning, implementing and finalising a research project students will have a direct experience of the theoretical, ethical, political and practical aspects of applied social research.
Contemporary Perspectives in Criminology
Contemporary criminological knowledge typically concerns explanations of offending, victimisation, prevention and safety, but debates about these matters also reflect unequal power, social division and exclusion. The unit will focus on the criminological concern with individual offenders and the implications of this for responses to crimes including those of the powerful. Additionally, it will analyse the impacts of the blurred lines between the public and private, the national and global, citizens and aliens, as well as evidence about the expansion of more intensive forms of policing and surveillance in contemporary societies.
In recent decades, models and understanding of gender have become a major way of explaining crime and victimisation. Most obviously, feminist researchers have pioneered studies of the neglected victimisation of women from male violence and the impact of gendered discourses on the criminal justice system. This unit will critically engage with this material and also focus on contemporary accounts of the links between criminal offending and different violent and non-violent masculinities. Lastly, the shifting regulation of different sexualities and their criminalisation will be analysed.
And one elective
Contemporary Debates in Social Science
This unit will provide students with the opportunity to engage with contemporary debates in the social sciences. Students will examine key concepts and structures in the social sciences such as place, work, community, family, power, diversity and globalisation within the context of current political and social events. This will encourage the student to critically analyse and understand current debates and contentious issues relevant to the social sciences. Students will use both theoretical and applied knowledge to develop an informed position on matters of continuing importance to the community and the polity.
Contemporary societies are replete with images of crime across cultural forms including media, writing, film and television. This unit will examine these depictions of crime in society and moral panic about crime, with a stress on the value of ethnographic studies and a comparison between different theoretical explanations of crime and culture. Additionally, it will focus on accounts of the cultural origins of forms of violence, property crime, drug use and collective disorder as manifestations of social protest, transgression and leisure. Lastly, the unit will critically examine evidence about the culture of criminal justice agencies such as courts and prisons.
The demise of corporal punishment and regular use of imprisonment are defining features of control in modern states. This unit provides a historical and sociological examination of models, practices and justifications for punishment and incarceration. It analyses early liberal notions of the social contract, the 'great incarcerations' and criminology's stress on treatment, reform and rehabilitation. It further examines the development of probation and parole systems, decarceration, community corrections, mass imprisonment, and the contemporary control of risk and the 'dangerous'. Additionally, it explores the impact of imprisonment and corrections by such factors as age, social class, racial/ethnic identity, sex/gender, and disability.
And one elective
Elective units may be used toward obtaining an additional approved sub-major (40 credit points). UWS offers sub-majors in a range of areas including Sustainability and Indigenous Studies. Refer to the Unit Set Index.
Students can apply for these unit sets using the Course Variation Form, which is listed under Enrolment Forms on the Student forms web page.
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