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Master’s Program in Sociology

The Master’s program broadens your foundational knowledge and expands your analytical skills, equipping you with ideal prerequisites to enter exciting and challenging specialist professional fields.

The Master’s program at the University of Zurich Department of Sociology allows you to custom-design your degree course flexibly. You deepen and broaden the knowledge you acquired in the Bachelor’s program.

The curriculum for sociology major students centers on the acquisition of comprehensive skills in planning and conducting theory-driven empirical research. Our teaching staff will provide you with extensive support in developing a research topic, analyzing the data, and visualizing and interpreting the research findings.

Choice of Major

As part of your degree program, you select courses in the areas of sociology theory and sociological methods. You additionally choose your personal focus area by attending courses in the three main research focus areas: «Life Course and Generations», «Social Norms and Cooperation» and «Economic Sociology».

Choice of Minor

As the largest comprehensive university in the German-speaking region of Switzerland, the University of Zurich also offers a wide spectrum of elective minors that can be variably combined with the sociology major. This diversity enables you to organize your degree course in accordance with your needs and interests, and it optimally prepares you for a career in academia, in research institutions, or in the commercial or non-profit sector.

Additional Information

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Insights into the Master's Program (German)

More about Insights into the Master's Program (German)

Study focus areas

The sociology study program at the University of Zurich Department of Sociology features the following focus areas: 

Life Course and Generations

The evolution of modern society also has impacts on the courses that life take and on families. This focus area studies intergenerational exchange and conflicts, for example, and examines the question of how provenance and education or genetic factors affect life, career success and family relations, often drawing on comparisons between countries including Switzerland.

Social Norms and Cooperation

Social norms are essential to orderly human coexistence. They particularly facilitate cooperation between people and entities, thus enabling the establishment of a reliability of expectations, but also the creation of specific public goods such as a clean environment or street lighting. However, violations of the rules of social conduct are an everyday phenomenon. The range of deviant behavior extends from misdemeanor offences such as fare dodging to scientific research fraud and severe felonies. This focus area investigates, for example, under what conditions certain norms originate and examines how the anticipation of punishment for violating rules affects behavior. Such questions are researched through social experiments and other means.

Economic Sociology

Seismic changes in world economic activity – be it globalization, a crisis in the financial industry, social inequality in many countries, or the evolution of management compensation –    have profound consequences for the social stratification and organization of contemporary societies. But this focus area also examines equitable and sustainable consumption and why some consumers spend their money on attending the opera while others choose instead to buy tickets to the latest blockbuster movie. Beyond those specific questions, basic theoretical discussions of present-day economic structures are also addressed.

Methodological and Theoretical Training

The scientific study of social phenomena requires a systematic, methodologically controlled investigation process. Data get collected through means including surveys, interviews, experiments and content analysis, and are analyzed using advanced statistical methods. It takes comprehensive theoretical knowledge about societal processes to understand the results of sociological studies. The objective is not just to be able to describe society, but also to explain it.

The training incorporates the latest findings from numerous university, national and international research projects.