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The Bachelor of Arts program offers more than forty specialized fields, equipping students with research abilities, in-depth subject expertise, and independent learning skills to gather information, evaluate evidence, and articulate sophisticated concepts. Through initiatives like the Monash Arts Global Immersion Guarantee, students gain international exposure via internships, professional experiences, and study abroad options, fostering global citizenship and networking with peers in diverse cultural settings. The curriculum explores human diversity, communication dynamics, and intricate social structures. The Bachelor of Criminology examines crime and societal regulation - investigating definitions, root causes, and societal reactions that mirror broader cultural patterns. This degree explores victimization, criminal behavior, and social disparities, analyzing crime and justice systems across local, national, and international dimensions. Students examine offenses by individuals, organizations, and governments, while studying law enforcement, judicial processes, and rehabilitation systems. The program facilitates engagement with criminal justice policymakers and practical experiences across various contexts. Students can complement criminology with related disciplines like psychology, sociology, or gender studies. A combined Arts/Criminology degree hones analytical reasoning, evidence assessment, and reform evaluation skills, producing specialists with versatile competencies valued across industries.
The Linguistics and English Language major applies scientific methods to language analysis, with Monash's program emphasizing multilingual communities, globalization's linguistic impacts, language education, and preservation of endangered languages. Students may focus on English as a global communication tool. This discipline systematically examines language structures, variations, and universal patterns, using English as a primary case study to investigate identity formation, sociocultural systems, language evolution, and multilingual communication. These analytical frameworks support complementary studies in fields ranging from anthropology to computer science. English as an International Language (EIL) represents an innovative academic approach examining English's worldwide variations and its role in cross-cultural interactions. EIL courses encourage critical reflection on personal English usage across contexts while analyzing the language's ideological dimensions in both localized and international settings.