Dec 04, 2024  
2023-2024 Academic Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Criminal Justice and Human Security, M.A.

Location(s): Main Campus


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Carlson Hall, Room 209
Telephone: (203) 576-4869

Program Description

UB’s Master of Arts in Criminal Justice and Human Security degree program is designed to help you attain expertise in the worldwide political, cultural, and socioeconomic condi­tions that contribute to crime and its attenua­tion. Our program will help you gain insight into the cultural, ethnic, religious and ideo­logical differences often discovered at the root of criminal acts, violence, and terror. Among some of the in-depth topics covered in this program: domestic, international, and com­parative criminal law; transnational crime; cybercrime, and cyberterrorism-all taught by experienced faculty from UB’s School of Public and International Affairs. Human se­curity, as it relates to modern threats such as terrorism, human trafficking, and ethno­centric violence, will also be explored. This broader understanding of human rights and its connection to history, global policy, inter­national peace and security, and humanitar­ian affairs provides a strong foundation on which you will be able to draw correlations and build solutions towards a safer world.

Learning Objectives

  • Demonstrate the skills necessary to excel in professional careers in federal, state, and international law enforcement agen­cies where intercultural communication skills, foreign language skills, and insights into other cultures are increasingly impor­tant both to address criminal activity and to take needed steps to prevent it
  • Demonstrate an understanding of and ap­preciation of the rule of law, law enforce­ment’s role in the securing and protection of civil and human rights, and an un­derstanding of the social conditions and circumstances that foster or discourage criminal behavior
  • Demonstrate an understanding of Human Security and its role in the realization of a just and lawful society and the impact that this understanding of security has upon the existing notions of national, regional and international security
  • Demonstrate the intercultural literacy skills needed to relate to an increasingly globalized population where norms and values may differ
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the role of non-state actors in international crime and justice, in such fields as norm cre­ation, deviance, terrorism, and crime pre­vention
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the interpretations of religion, ideology, and culture that contribute to the proliferation and/or the deterrence of violence and crime

Curriculum


While pursuing your Master of Arts in Criminal Justice and Human Security degree, you will be required to take 18 semester hours of core courses and 18 semester hours of electives.Students can choose one track : Thesis Track or Internship Track

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