Undergraduate Programmes
Whether you are with us for one module, for a year or all the way to the degree we hope you find sociology enlightening. The School of Sociology is full of people who are passionately interested in topics from across the wide expanse that sociology spans. This is reflected in the range of module options taught in the School of Sociology covering topics such as gender, work, anthropology, the developing world, the state, health and illness, American society, childhood, the environment, education, cities, migration, etc.
Although you will find lots of other students with you in your sociology lectures, the School of Sociology is committed to small-group teaching. This is done by providing seminars to accompany the optional modules. The optional module seminars are taught almost exclusively by the lecturers themselves, thus giving you more face-to-face contact with your lecturers.
Sociology: Programme Overview & Streams
This programme introduces students to sociology through four interconnected streams that address some of the most pressing questions of contemporary social life. Across all streams, students develop a strong foundation in sociological theory, research methods, and critical analysis, while exploring how societies are organised, governed, and transformed. Together, the streams offer complementary perspectives on global comparison, power and law, sustainability and health, and gendered and embodied inequalities. Students are encouraged to think across social contexts, historical periods, and levels of analysis, gaining the tools to understand both large-scale social processes and everyday lived experiences.
1. Comparative and Global Sociology
This stream focuses on understanding societies through comparison across regions, cultures, and historical contexts. Students examine how similar social forces such as globalisation, inequality, migration, and social change operate differently across societies, including Ireland, in a comparative perspective. The stream combines sociological theory, empirical research methods, and regionally focused case studies to develop students’ ability to analyse global patterns while remaining attentive to local specificities. It provides a strong foundation for thinking sociologically beyond national boundaries.
2. Power, Law, and Society
This stream explores how power is exercised, contested, and institutionalised in social life. Students examine the role of law, justice, conflict, and governance in shaping social order, alongside processes of resistance, activism, and social change. Through topics such as crime and deviance, democracy and civil society, surveillance, war, and social movements, the stream highlights the dynamic relationship between authority and opposition. It equips students with critical tools to analyse political institutions, legal frameworks, and struggles over rights and justice.
3. Sustainability, Health, and Society
This stream examines the social dimensions of health, illness, and environmental change. Students explore how social inequalities shape exposure to risk, access to care, and experiences of health across different populations, as well as how climate change and sustainability challenges are socially produced and governed. Drawing on sociological perspectives on the environment, science, education, gender, and inequality, the stream emphasises that health and sustainability are deeply social issues. It encourages students to critically assess how societies organise, value, and protect life.
4. Gender, Bodies, and Social Inequality
This stream focuses on how gender, embodiment, care, and intimacy are shaped by broader structures of social inequality. Students examine family life, ethical relations of care, health, the body, and social stratification through sociological theories of gender and power. The stream highlights how inequalities are lived, experienced, and reproduced through everyday practices and institutions. It provides students with tools to analyse how social differences are embodied and how gendered relations intersect with class, health, and other forms of inequality.
Click here for a full list of undergraduate sociology modules.
Modules in bold formatting refer to core modules
LEVEL |
STREAM 1: COMPARATIVE & GLOBAL SOCIOLOGY |
STREAM 2: POWER, LAW, & SOCIETY |
STREAM 3: SUSTAINABILITY, HEALTH, AND SOCIETY |
STREAM 4: GENDER, BODIES, & SOCIAL INEQUALITY |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SOC10010 Theorising Society | SOC10010 Theorising Society | SOC10010 Theorising Society | SOC10010 Theorising Society |
| 1 | SOC10020 Introduction to Sociology | SOC10020 Introduction to Sociology | SOC10020 Introduction to Sociology | SOC10020 Introduction to Sociology |
| 1 | SOC10070 Sociological Analysis | SOC10070 Sociological Analysis | SOC10070 Sociological Analysis | SOC10070 Sociological Analysis |
| 1 | SOC10060 Ireland in Comparative Perspective | SOC10060 Ireland in Comparative Perspective | SOC10060 Ireland in Comparative Perspective | SOC10060 Ireland in Comparative Perspective |
| SOC10110 Sociology of Crime & Deviance | ||||
| 2 | SOC20260 Quantitative Methods | SOC20260 Quantitative Methods | SOC20260 Quantitative Methods | SOC20260 Quantitative Methods |
| 2 | SOC20320 Qualitative Research | SOC20320 Qualitative Research | SOC20320 Qualitative Research | SOC20320 Qualitative Research |
| 2 | SOC20100 Theory Level 2 | SOC20100 Theory Level 2 | SOC20100 Theory Level 2 | SOC20100 Theory Level 2 |
| 2 | SOC20210 Animals & Human Society | SOC20330 Sociology of Peace, Conflict, & Justice | SOC20360 Environment | SOC20280 Sociology of the Family |
| 2 | SOC20250 Sociology of Nations | SOC20350 Sociology of Law | SOC20270 Sociology of Health & Inequality | SOC20040 Sociology of Gender |
| 2 | SOC20380 Global Developments | SOC20450 Social Movements | SOC20460 Health, Illness, & Society | |
| 2 | SOC20220 Social Theory & Social Media | |||
| 2 | SOC20070 Social Anthropology | |||
| 3 | SOC30580 Latin American Sociology | SOC30570 Solidarities, Power, & Difference | SOC30820 Sociology of Risk and Disaster | SOC30350 Work & Social Stratification |
| 3 | SOC30100 American Society | SOC30440 Sociology of the Body | ||
| 3 | SOC30360 Sociology of Migration, Race, & Ethnicity | SOC30700 Democracy & Civil Society | SOC30070 Sociology of Education | SOC30790 Alcohol, Drugs, & Society |
| 3 | SOC30560 Global Inequalities | SOC30780 Security & Surveillance | SOC30220 Science & Society | SOC30810 Gender, Health, & Society |
| 3 | SOC30380 Social Dynamics & Networks | |||
| 3 | SOC30800 Sociology of Empire | |||
| 4 | SOC30550 Research Project | SOC30550 Research Project | SOC30550 Research Project | SOC30550 Research Project |
| 4 | SOC30330 Currents in Contemporary Theory | SOC30330 Currents in Contemporary Theory | SOC30330 Currents in Contemporary Theory | SOC30330 Currents in Contemporary Theory |
| 4 | SOC30710 Historical Sociology | SOC30710 Historical Sociology | SOC30710 Historical Sociology | SOC30710 Historical Sociology |
Pathways to Postgraduate Study
These four streams provide strong preparation for postgraduate study across the School’s Master’s programmes. The emphasis on sociological theory, research methods, and independent inquiry equips graduates for both the MSc Sociology and MA Sociology, where students pursue advanced theoretical and empirical work across diverse areas of the discipline. The focus on environmental change, health, and inequality in Sustainability, Health, and Society aligns closely with the MSc Sustainable Societies, while the comparative and international orientation of Comparative and Global Sociology provides a natural pathway into the MSc Comparative Social Change. Across all pathways, students graduate with the analytical skills and sociological imagination required for advanced research, policy analysis, and further academic study.
From Degree to Career: Sociology Alumni Reflect
Students can also study Sociology in the following programmes:


