Criminology and Cybercrime istock hero banner image..

Year of study

2027
Start date(s)
September 2027
Location
Leeds City Campus
School
Social Sciences
UCAS tariff points
104
Study mode
Full-time (3 years)
Study abroad
Yes

How is technology changing the nature of crime, justice, and social harm in the modern world? From cybercrime and online fraud to digital investigations, artificial intelligence, and surveillance, the challenges facing criminal justice professionals are evolving rapidly. Our Criminology with Cybercrime and Digital Justice degree will help you understand these emerging issues while developing the knowledge and skills needed to respond to them critically and effectively.

You'll develop analytical, investigative, and problem-solving skills relevant to careers in policing, intelligence, digital investigation, cybercrime prevention, safeguarding, compliance, and wider criminal justice and public sector roles.

This course is subject to validation. You can still apply for this course while it is being approved.

The Student Contract

About this course

Technology is reshaping the way crime is committed, investigated, and prevented. Studying on our BA (Combined Honours) Criminology with Cybercrime and Digital Justice will allow you to explore some of the most pressing challenges facing contemporary society, from cyber-enabled fraud and online exploitation to digital surveillance, artificial intelligence, and emerging forms of criminal behaviour. You'll develop a strong foundation in criminological theory while gaining specialist knowledge of how technology is transforming criminal justice systems and responses to crime. 

You'll learn from research-informed academics with expertise across criminology, policing, investigation, victimisation, and criminal justice. The programme combines academic study with practical and professional development opportunities, enabling you to apply your learning to real-world issues. Through our Criminology in Practice module, you will gain valuable workplace experience and develop the confidence, skills, and professional awareness sought by employers across criminal justice, public services, and related sectors. 

Throughout the course, you will examine key issues including cybercrime, online harms, digital investigations, crime and social media, digital culture, victimisation, justice, and the governance of technology. Throughout the modules, you'll gain opportunities to critically explore how technological developments create new risks, opportunities, and ethical dilemmas. You'll also engage with broader debates surrounding inequality, social justice, race, power, and accountability, considering how digital technologies can both challenge and reinforce existing social inequalities. 

The programme will help you develop a wide range of transferable skills valued by employers. These include critical thinking, research and analytical skills, digital literacy, communication, problem-solving, evidence-based decision-making, and the ability to evaluate complex social and technological issues. Through independent research projects, practical activities, case studies, and collaborative learning, you will learn how to gather, analyse, and interpret information while presenting well-reasoned arguments and recommendations. 

You'll build your employability through structured modules at each level of study: 

  • Level 4: 50 hours of work-related learning through placements or professional challenges, introducing real-world contexts 
  • Level 5: 90-hour professional placement, with opportunities self-sourced or supported by Careers and Placements 
  • Level 6: Optional work-based project with an employer, applying criminology knowledge to real-world scenarios. 

Why study with us?

  • Explore crime at the cutting edge of technology change – understand how cybercrime, artificial intelligence, online harms, digital investigations and emerging technologies are transforming crime, policing and justice in the 21st century.
  • Combine criminological insight with digital justice expertise – this programme blends core criminology with specialist knowledge of cybercrime, digital evidence, online victimisation, surveillance and technology governance.
  • Develop career-ready skills for a growing sector – build analytical, research, digital, intelligence-gathering and problem-solving skills valued across policing, investigation, intelligence, compliance, fraud prevention, safeguarding and criminal justice.
  • Examine technology through a social justice lens – explore how race, inequality, power, ethics and accountability intersect with digital technologies, and the risks and opportunities they create.
  • Apply your learning through professional experience and research – undertake workplace learning and a specialist project to investigate real-world cybercrime and digital justice issues while building practical skills and confidence.

 

Student studying on a tablet in a seminar.

Our achievements

Ranked 7th in the UK for Student Satisfaction

Sociology discipline (which includes Criminology) Subject League table, The Complete University Guide 2027, released June 2026

3rd in Yorkshire for Teaching among universities in the UK included for Sociology

National Student Survey 2025

2nd in Yorkshire for Learning Opportunities among universities in the UK included for Sociology

National Student Survey 2025

2nd in Yorkshire for Academic Support among universities in the UK included for Sociology

National Student Survey 2025

Course modules

You will study a variety of modules across your programme of study. The module details given below are subject to change and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

Year 1

During your first year, you'll study five core modules.

Crime, Harm, and Digital Society – Core
Introduction to Criminology – Core

Explore and examine the origins of criminology, some of its historical debates, concepts, literature and research.

You'll look at the core perspectives and theories related to crime and criminality.

Find out about the history and development of criminology as an academic discipline.

Violence in Society – Core

Explore criminological understandings and situations of violence in society.

We'll cover the types, characteristics, and forms of violence and violent acts within society.

You'll distinguish between individual acts to organised actions of groups and states, all whilst unpacking the ambiguous content and perception of violence.

You'll give due consideration to the frequently neglected victims of violence.

The module framework includes criminology, sociology, psychology, law, cultural studies, political science and sociobiology.

Academic and Research Skills – Core
Career Development in Criminology – Core

Year 2

During your second year, you'll study five core modules.

Cybercrime and Digital Justice – Core
Crime, Media and Digital Justice – Core
Victims, Harm and Justice – Core
Criminology in Practice: Careers and Competencies – Core
Research Methods in Criminology – Core

Year 3

During your final year, you'll study three core modules and will be required to choose two option modules, one worth 30 credits and one worth 15 credits.

Professional Learning Through Work – Core

You'll have a flexible range of opportunities to enhance your professional skills and graduate opportunities as this module will be tailored to each student's development.

You'll apply the theoretical understanding you've been developing throughout your degree to a chosen professional context. This could include a work-based project or skills development approach where you will identify and address specific gaps in your portfolio of graduate-level skills.

Criminology with Cybercrime and Digital Justice Research Project – Core
Controlling Cybercrime – Core
Global Challenges and Social Futures (30 credits) – Optional
Organised Crime (30 credits) – Optional
Crimes of the 21st Century (30 credits) – Optional
Victim Support and Young People (15 credits) – Optional
Criminalised Women (15 credits) – Optional
Criminal Deaths and Society's Grief (15 credits) – Optional
Intelligence, Security and the British State – Optional

You'll develop an understanding of the role of intelligence agencies in combating insecurity in Britain since 1900. You'll gain an understanding of the role of the British Security Services, Police and Military since the the beginning of the 20th Century, examining critically the changing nature of the threat posed to the British state. You will focus on the way institutions have adapted to varying security concerns from German or Soviet spies, the Troubles in Northern Ireland and the more recent emergence of Terrorism and State Interference. You will also examine the complexity of securitisation within a democratic political framework.   

This module focuses on the evolution of security studies as a discipline and its implications for practice. You'll examine a variety of theoretical and empirical materials in order to analyse pressing questions related to issues of war, security and peace in the world today. 

Learning and teaching

Assessment

A variety of assessment methods are used, matched to the learning outcomes for your programme, allowing you to apply and demonstrate the full range of knowledge and skills that you have developed.

For more details on specific assessment methods for this course contact hello@leedstrinity.ac.uk

Programme delivery

Your time on campus, learning through in-person teaching, is at the heart of your academic experience and the way we deliver our programmes. This is supported and further enhanced by additional engagement activities and opportunities provided online and through digital teaching materials. This blended approach seeks to ensure a positive learning and teaching student experience.

Your programme of study has been carefully designed around a three-phase model of delivery:

  1. Preparation: You will be given clear tasks to support you in preparing for live teaching. This could include watching a short-pre-recorded lecture, reading a paper or text chapter or preparing other material for use in class.
  2. Live: All your live teaching will be designed around active learning, providing you with valuable opportunities to build on preparation tasks, interact with staff and peers, and surface any misunderstandings.
  3. Post: Follow-up activities will include opportunities for you to check understanding, for staff to receive feedback from you and your peers to inform subsequent sessions, and for you to apply learning to new situations or context.

Preparation, Live and Post teaching and learning and the digital materials used will vary by course, but will be designed to help you structure your learning, take a full and active part in your course, and apply and test your developing knowledge and skills.

Learning and teaching

At Leeds Trinity we aim to provide an excellent student experience and provide you with the tools and support to help you achieve your academic, personal and professional potential.

Our Learning, Teaching and Assessment Strategy delivers excellence by providing the framework for:

  • high quality teaching
  • an engaging and inclusive approach to learning, assessment and achievement
  • a clear structure through which you progress in your academic studies, your personal development and towards professional-level employment or further study.

We have a strong reputation for developing student employability, supporting your development towards graduate employment, with relevant skills embedded throughout your programme of study.

We endeavour to develop curiosity, confidence, courage, ambition and aspiration in all students through the key themes in our Learning and Teaching Strategy:

  • Student Involvement and Engagement
  • Inclusion
  • Integrated Programme and Assessment Experience
  • Digital Literacy and Skills
  • Employability and Enterprise

To help you achieve your potential we emphasise learning as a collaborative process, with a range of student-led and real-world activities. This approach ensures that you fully engage in shaping your own learning, developing your critical thinking and reflective skills so that you can identify your own strengths and weaknesses, and use the extensive learning support system we offer to shape your own development.

We believe the secret to great learning and teaching is simple: it is about creating an inclusive learning experience that allows all students to thrive through:

  • Personalised support
  • Expert lecturers
  • Strong connections with employers
  • An international outlook
  • Understanding how to use tools and technology to support learning and development

Entry requirements

Leeds Trinity University is committed to recruiting students with talent and potential and who we feel will benefit greatly from their academic and non-academic experiences here. We treat every application on its own merits; we value highly the experience you illustrate in your personal statement.

Information about the large range of qualifications we accept, including A-Levels, BTECs and T Levels, can be found on our entry requirements page. If you need additional advice or are taking qualifications that are not covered in the information supplied, please contact our Admissions Office.

Leeds Trinity University is committed to recruiting students with talent and potential and who we feel will benefit greatly from their academic and non-academic experiences here. We treat every application on its own merits; we value highly the experience you illustrate in your personal statement.

The following information is designed to give you a general overview of the qualifications we accept. If you are taking qualifications that are not included below, please contact our Admissions Office who will be happy to advise you.

Entry requirements for this course:
UCAS tariff 104
GCSE requirements GCSE in English Language or English Literature at grade C or 4 (or higher) will be required.

Fees and finance

UK Home fees

£9,790

Full-time

Funding

UK Home Students:

Tuition fees cost £9,790 a year for this course in 2026/2027.

Tuition fees for part-time study are charged a pro-rata amount of the full-time equivalent.

Depending on government policy, tuition fees may change in future years.

Tuition fees for 2027/2028 entry will be set in summer 2026.

Living costs, e.g. accommodation, travel, food, will also need to be taken into consideration.

Leeds Trinity offers a range of bursaries and scholarships to help support students while you study.

International Students, including EU Students:

Visit our webpage for international students.

Part-time study is not available for international students on a Student Route Visa. 

Additional costs

We advise students that there may be additional course costs in addition to annual tuition fees:

  • Recommended and required reading lists will be provided at the start of your course. All the books and e-books are available from our Library to borrow but you may choose to purchase your own.
  • On some courses there may be additional costs, such as field trips, equipment, accreditations, that may be part-funded by the University. More details will be provided at the start of the course.
  • You'll need to include placement/s travel and associated costs too, however the University will contribute a standard amount towards your total expenditure.
  • The University provides students with a £6 printing credit each academic year which can be topped up either on campus or online.

How to apply

For full-time undergraduate courses, you apply through UCAS. That's the University and Colleges Admissions Service.

On your application form, you'll need to know our institution code - it's L24 - and the course code. If you click through to the UCAS website using the button below, it'll take you to the right place with all the information you need.

As part of your application, you'll need to write a personal statement - we've prepared a guide to help you.

Undergraduate applications for September 2027 entry will open on Tuesday, 12 May 2026. You’ll be able to submit your application from Tuesday, 1 September 2026.

There's lots more information about the application process on the UCAS website, or you can get in touch with our Admissions team who will be happy to help:

Graduate opportunities

Providing you with the opportunity to develop the professional skills and experience you need to launch your career is at the heart of everything we do at Leeds Trinity University.

Graduates will be well prepared for careers in policing, intelligence and security, digital investigation, cybercrime prevention, safeguarding, compliance, fraud investigation, policy development, and wider criminal justice professions. The degree also provides an excellent foundation for postgraduate study and professional development in criminology, criminal justice, cybercrime, digital investigations, and related fields.   

Typical career routes include: 

  • Cybercrime investigator
  • Digital investigations officer
  • Intelligence analyst
  • Fraud investigator
  • Cyber security analyst
  • Digital forensics support roles
  • Online safeguarding practitioner
  • Internet safety and exploitation prevention roles
  • Police staff investigator roles
  • Data and compliance roles within criminal justice agencies
  • Roles within financial investigation and fraud prevention
  • Security and risk management positions
  • Research and policy roles linked to cybercrime and technology 

Potential employers include police forces, the National Crime Agency, local authorities, cyber security companies, financial institutions, probation services, and specialist safeguarding organisations. 

After you graduate, Careers and Placements will help you as you pursue your chosen career through our mentoring scheme, support with CV and interview preparation and access to graduate employability events.

To find out how we can help you make your career ambitions a reality, visit:

Careers

Meet the team

Amelia Bell

Andi Brierley

Rob Hornsby

Joanna Adhikari

Natalie Rutter

Shaun McDaid

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