Honours Thesis
CRCJ 4908 [1.0 credit] Honours Thesis
The Honours Thesis is not compulsory for completion of the Honours BA in Criminology & Criminal Justice. Students not completing CRCJ 4908 must instead complete 1.0 credit of .
Though it is not compulsory, it is however good experience/practice for students who hope to go on to graduate studies and/or careers involving data analysis. It is sometimes required for admission to some Masters programs.
The Honours Thesis is a full-credit course conducted under the direct supervision of a faculty advisor from Criminology & Criminal Justice, Law and Legal Studies, or Sociology and Anthropology. It involves doing original research, data collection, data analysis and a summary of the results and implications. The resulting essay is marked by the supervisor and reviewed by the Institute Director.
Prerequisite(s): Fourth-year standing in the B.A. Honours program in Criminology and Criminal Justice with a CGPA of 10.00 or better in the Major and/or permission of the Institute.
Information Session Presentation:
Honours Thesis Info Session presentation
More information can be found on this information sheet.
You can find previously completed Honours Theses in the .
Check out the below videos to hear some of the 2024-2025 Honours Thesis (CRCJ 4908) students discuss their research and experience in the thesis course:
Brie Bhasin: Rewriting Reality: Media Influence on Crime and Public Consciousness in the Robert Pickton case
Isabelle Deady Bell: Patriarchy, Colonialism, & Punishment
Sarah Scriver: Crawling Out of the Pits of Hell鈥: Exploring Indigenous Resilience and Post-Traumatic Growth After Experiences of Incarceration