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The Bachelor of Arts program offers a selection from more than forty fields of study, equipping you with research capabilities, in-depth subject expertise, and the independence to gather information, evaluate evidence, and articulate sophisticated concepts. You can enhance your global perspective through numerous internships, professional involvement, and study abroad options, including the Monash Arts Global Immersion Guarantee, readying you for life and careers in intricate, multicultural settings while forming a network of peers with similar interests. You will gain a deep appreciation for human diversity, communication, and the intricacies of social structures. The Bachelor of Criminology explores crime and societal regulation: our definitions, causes, and reactions to it offer insights into our community. This program provides knowledge about victimization and offending, as well as inequality and its consequences. You will examine crime and justice at local, national, and international levels, evaluating evolving societal responses. Study offenses by individuals, groups, corporations, and governments, and the components of the criminal justice system, such as law enforcement, courts, and prisons. You will interact with policy experts in crime and justice and witness the system in operation across various global, national, and local scenarios. Consider pairing criminology with complementary fields like psychology, sociology, behavioral studies, gender studies, or anthropology. By pursuing a double degree in Arts and Criminology, you will hone abilities in assessing evidence critically, formulating supported arguments, and grasping the potential and hurdles of reform. You will become a specialist in your chosen area and be prepared for the workforce with essential skills sought by employers across industries. Politics is an outstanding field for exploring interconnections in human society and acquiring a wide array of interpretive and analytical abilities. The discipline engages in critical discussions about governance, policy development and implementation, social conduct, and political activities, including electoral systems, conflict management or resolution, and interstate relations. Ultimately, political studies focus on key issues regarding power, authority, and governance, and the interplay between theory and practice. At Monash, politics aims to provide an understanding of various global contemporary issues, along with a solid intellectual foundation in the discipline's main debates, texts, and inquiry traditions. The politics curriculum at Monash highlights three primary areas: government, policy, and leadership; international relations and comparative governance; and political philosophy and political psychology.