BS Criminal Justice Administration - Institutional Health Care
The mission of the Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Administration is to provide students with a strong foundation in criminal justice principles, concepts and theories, as well as a practice orientation to justice administration. The degree offers a global perspective, as well as specific concentration areas of criminal justice services delivery. Students will receive core instruction in criminal justice as it is represented in the domains of police, courts and corrections, and then advance to concentrations related to specific areas of criminal justice within those domains.
The Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Administration - Institutional Health Care concentration addresses the basic body of knowledge, understanding and skills identified as relevant to criminal justice-based health care services. This includes such areas as management, policy, legal and ethical parameters, health and disease factors, and health care service delivery. The reshaping of contemporary criminal justice health care requires workers to have a broad range of knowledge associated with the functions of health care in detention and correctional institutions, as well as various other areas represented in the greater criminal justice system.
This undergraduate degree program includes 45 credits in the required course of study and 15 credits in the concentration. Some courses have prerequisites. In addition, students must satisfy general education and elective requirements to meet the 120-credit minimum (124 for Kansas students), including a minimum of 45 upper division credits required for completion of the degree. At the time of enrollment, students must choose a concentration.
Note: The diploma awarded for this program will read as Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Administration and will not reflect the concentration. Concentrations are reflected on the transcript only.
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