BA (Hons) International Relations

Bachelor's degree

In London

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    London

  • Duration

    3 Years

  • Start date

    Different dates available

If you want to understand the impact of the Arab Spring or the ideology of ISIS, how US foreign policy is shaped by domestic politics, how international trade affects various parts of the world, how different cultures shape political decision making, or how international NGOs operate, this is the degree for you. From turmoil in the Middle East to the refugee crisis in Europe, from the economic rise of China to the decline of US dominance, from global fears about security and climate change to new opportunities and risks presented by borderless communication, we live in a constantly changing world. BA International Relations enables you to understand these dynamics at a deeper level and develop the knowledge and skills to address the global challenges of the twenty-first century. During the degree you’ll explore the institutions, conflicts and dynamics that shape our contemporary world. You‘ll study the theory of international relations, global governance, international political economy, foreign policy and diplomacy. This is complemented by specialist area-focused modules on the Middle East, Africa, China and East Asia, which investigate how international relations play out in different places. You can also enhance your knowledge in your personal areas of interest, with optional modules as diverse as security, development and human rights, foreign policy, conflict and genocide. This theoretical learning is complemented by the opportunity to apply your academic knowledge to an optional work placement in the international relations sector. This will give you valuable experience that will set you apart as you embark on your career in areas such as government, international institutions, policy thinktanks, development agencies and NGOs.

Facilities

Location

Start date

London
See map
New Cross, SE14 6NW

Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

About this course

We accept the following qualifications: A-level: BBBBTEC: DMMInternational Baccalaureate: 33 points overall with Three HL subjects at 655 Access: Pass with 45 Level 3 credits including 30 Distinctions and a number of merits/passes in subject-specific modulesScottish qualifications: BBBBC (Higher) or BBC (Advanced Higher)European Baccalaureate: 75%Irish Leaving Certificate: H2 H2 H2 H2 We also accept a wide range of international qualifications.

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Subjects

  • Climate
  • World Politics
  • Foreign Policy
  • Trade
  • Government
  • Public
  • Law
  • Global
  • International
  • Climate Change
  • Economics
  • Political Theory
  • Governance
  • International Trade
  • Politics
  • International Relations
  • Conflict
  • IT Law

Course programme

What you'll study Year 1 (credit level 4)

Students take the following compulsory modules:

Year 1 compulsory modules Module title Credits. World Politics World Politics 30 credits

This unit will introduce students to the study of world politics, emphasising that there are different and competing perspectives on how to approach the subject.

In the first term, we focus on the three dominant paradigms (realism, pluralism and structuralism) that defined the discipline of International Relations throughout the 20th Century. We situate those paradigms in the historical context in which they were developed and critically examine both their contribution to our understanding of world politics and their shortcomings.

In the second term, the unit identifies some of the contours of the post-Cold War inter-national environment. In particular, it explores claims that contemporary world politics are defined by processes of globalisation.

30 credits. Political Theory and Ideologies Political Theory and Ideologies 30 credits

This is an introduction to political theory and an exploration of why central political ideas and concepts influence our understanding of the world around us. Assessed by: one essay and a two-hour unseen examination.

30 credits. The Politics of Other Cultures The Politics of Other Cultures 30 credits

This module aims to provide students with an understanding of the importance of colonialism and imperialism, and resistance to these, in the shaping of our world. It treats culture, including forms of art, as central to politics.

It begins by considering non-Western forms of politics, civilization and culture prior to colonial domination. The rest of the module explores the forms of political, cultural, aesthetic and ideological interaction, and change, engendered in the module of the colonial encounter. A related aim of the module is to introduce students to a range of types of reading material and sources, beyond the conventional first year text book.

30 credits.

You then choose to study International Political Economy and Introduction to Political Economy:

Module title Credits. Introduction to Political Economy Introduction to Political Economy 15 credits

This module provides an introduction to the main theories, concepts, and topics in the field of political economy. The principal aim of the module is to explore how our conceptions of the economy and of economic action are inescapably political, by which I mean that they are a) based upon political assumptions concerning human agency and b) have political implications.

The module explores these hypotheses by examining the emergence and history of economics beginning with Adam Smith, progressing through the marginalist economists and neoclassical economics and finishing with modern political economists such as Joseph Stiglitz and Ha-Joon Chang.

15 credits. Introduction to Economic Policy Introduction to Economic Policy 15 credits

This module provides an introduction to the main theories, concepts, and topics concerning economic policy.

The principal aim of the module is to examine the ways in which public, economic, and international policies (which are in practice interchangeable) are bound up with political economic understandings of the economy and economic agency. Put differently, the aim of the module is to explore the deep and ineradicable links between political practice and economic ideas.

The module explores these links by progressing through the basic concepts in public policy (such as public goods and monetary/fiscal policies) before an examination of the main issues, questions and developments in modern policy such as gender, financial crises and international organisation.

15 credits.

Or UK and European Comparative Governance and Politics:

Module title Credits. UK and European Comparative Governance and Politics UK and European Comparative Governance and Politics 30 credits

This unit introduces students to the comparative approach to politics and government, in addition to building a understanding of the politics and governance of four key members of the European Union: the UK, Germany, Italy and France.

The first half of the unit is focused on the UK and also considers the EU as an institution, while the second half concentrates on the other three countries at the unit’s core.

Students will not only build an essential foundation for studying the politics of the UK and EU, but will also develop their skills in comparative methods.

30 credits. Year 2 (credit level 5)

You will study the following core modules:

Year 2 core modules Module title Credits. Contemporary International Relations Theories Contemporary International Relations Theories 15 credits

This module focuses on the principal debates and issues that have been shaping world politics since the end of the Cold War.

The module provides a detailed review of the main theoretical perspectives contributing to contemporary international relations theory, critically assesses what international relations theory is about, identifies the abstractions and logic it deploys, and interrogates its relation to the outside world.

15 credits. Global Governance and World Order Global Governance and World Order 15 credits

This module explores the place and the role of international organisations in the international system. The module covers historical, theoretical, legal and policy-related aspects of the evolving nature and roles of international organisations in world politics.

A particular focus is the widening and deepening of international governance that has occurred since the end of the Cold War. This process of global governance is framed as a response to the increased prevalence of transnational concerns and problems that cannot be resolved by individual sovereign states.

The module explores how international organisations, in alliance with states and non-governmental actors, identify and respond to these problems.

15 credits. Critical Security Studies Critical Security Studies 15 credits

This module explores the contemporary security agenda in world politics. It addresses both theoretical debates over the nature of security and the range of phenomena currently identified as security threats.

The module takes as its point of entry the emergence in the post Cold War world of the idea of human security, which challenged the traditional view that the state was the primary referent of security. Contemporary security studies now focuses on a broad range of actors - states, individuals, substate groups, transnational NGOs and intergovernmental organisations.

These actors are studied as: i) subjects exposed to a range of security threats; ii) actors that individually and collectively seek to reduce their vulnerability to risk; iii) as sources of insecurity themselves.

15 credits.

You will then choose a total of 30 credits from a list of International Relations/area studies modules. Current examples include:

Year 2 option modules Module title Credits. US Politics and Foreign Policy US Politics and Foreign Policy 15 credits

This module explores the interaction between US domestic and foreign politics. It seeks to understand the way that domestic political dynamics influence foreign policy and the role of the US in the broader international arena. It introduces students to the structure of US government and the main interest groups involved in the foreign policy making process, examining the broader ideological and political trends that have shaped the way the US acts on the global stage as the world’s only remaining superpower.

Part of the module will take a historical overview, looking at how US foreign policy has developed post-Second War, throughout the Cold War, and into today’s War on Terror, showing how different administrations have responded to perceived international threats, opportunities and challenges, as well as domestic political pressures and concerns.

The module will also examine a number of contemporary issues currently faced by the US, which are likely to shape US foreign policy and security strategy for the foreseeable future: conflict in the Middle east; the threat of Islamist terrorism; the economic rise of China; global nuclear proliferation; the challenges posed by Russia; and the broader issue of global climate change. It will look at how the US responds to these dilemmas, and how these issues figure in domestic political debates and the US’ perception of itself.

15 credits. International Political Economy 2 International Political Economy 2 15 credits

This module combines a variety of approaches from history, sociology, and political economy in the study of the global political economy. Its focus will be on the connection between international economic integration and domestic socio-economic transformation in the making of the contemporary world order. Further, we will examine how theories have shaped policies in the context of increasing integration of the global economy.

*In order to study this module, you must have taken Economics modules at levels 4 and 5.

15 credits. Rough Politics Rough Politics 15 credits

To gain a more sophisticated (and less prejudiced) knowledge of “rough politics” is particularly vital today, as the age of globalisation seems to be framed by the conflict between the rule of law represented by western democracies, and the violent disorder embodied by the Global South.

In studying this shadowy territory we will touch upon fundamental issues for today's social sciences: the afterlives of Twentieth Century revolutionary politics, the connections between political violence and religion, the nature of informal and illegal economies, the current debates on globalisation from below, the prospects for social rebellion, the construction of new political subjectivities and novel ways of representing the “other”.

We will do all of this by studying the political significance of guerrilla warfare in shaping global politics; the language of martyrdom in religious based terrorism; Al Qaeda´s dependence on mass-murder to advance a populist theology, Somali pirates in the Arabian Sea reinventing the fascination and fear caused by pirates from a bygone age, Colombian paramilitaries enforcing order and disregarding at the very same time the Rule of Law, The Mara Salvatrucha street gang dominating neighbourhoods in El Salvador and Los Angeles, and hackers disturbing the otherwise unalterable profitmaking arrangements of the Internet.

15 credits.

Your remaining 45 credits are then chosen from a general list provided annually by the Department or from the above. Current examples include:

Year 2 option modules Module title Credits. Making Modern Japan Making Modern Japan 15 credits

This module addresses a number of themes that relate to questions of nationalism, imperialism, identity and gender, focusing on Japan’s emergence as a modern nation state, its imperial project and its catastrophic defeat, culminating in the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and its occupation by Allied forces. The historical perspective, which the module seeks to offer, is central to an understanding of Japan’s troubled relationship with its Asian neighbours, and of its claims of uniqueness, which have their legacy in its position as both coloniser and colonised. The module approaches questions of politics through a very expansive definition of the term, treating cinema, animation, manga, and other popular cultural forms as important sites for the articulation of political anxieties and concerns, which are not necessarily reflected in more conventional forms of political activity, such as political debates, deliberations of the Diet and so on.

15 credits. Chinese Politics: The Reform Era Chinese Politics: The Reform Era -

In just 30 years, China has leapt from being an overwhelmingly agrarian-based society to one where now, over half the population are urban residents. In this module, we will study this changing political culture as the pragmatic notion of a socialist market economy developed and gradually replaced the centrally planned economy of the era of Mao Zedong. In a broad overview of contemporary Chinese political trends we trace the development of the new political culture that emerges through debates in law, history, philosophy and everyday life.

-. Europe Since 1945 Europe Since 1945 15 credits

This module investigates the history of European society since 1945. This historical overview is divided into four thematic sections of several lectures each:

  • Cold War and Post-Cold War Europe
  • The Great Economic Boom and the Rise of Globalisation: Keynesianism, Neo-Liberalism and the Welfare State
  • End of Empires West and East: Decolonisation and the Rise of Multicultural Europe
  • European Integration and the Reconstruction of the European Nation-State
  • These themes reflect the unique changes in Europe since 1945, which still make this a valid periodisation today.

    15 credits. Ideologies and Interests: Political Thought in Modern Britain Ideologies and Interests: Political Thought in Modern Britain 15 credits

    A critical and historical study of political thinking and political argument in the United Kingdom since the early twentieth century to the present day, examining liberalism, socialism, conservatism, anarchism, feminism, the rise of the modern state, the nature of politics, and the character of the political community.

    The module examines the work of important thinkers from the William Morris and the Webbs through George Orwell and Virginia Woolf to the present day.

    15 credits. International Trade International Trade 15 credits

    This course introduces students to the study of international trade. Topics covered include the basics of classical and neoclassical trade theory, economies of scale, international factor mobil-ity, firms in the global economy, and the effect of trade on wages and income distribution.

    We will also discuss the tools used by governments to conduct trade policy (e.g. tariffs and quo-tas) and their impact on trade volumes and welfare. Finally, we will turn our attention to the experience of developing countries in the global economy in order to examine key debates on trade and development, trade liberalisation, trade policies and development strategies.

    The course is designed as a mixture of lectures, tutorials, and seminars.

    *Please note that students must have taken Economics modules at level 4 in order to enrol on this module.

    15 credits. International Monetary Economics International Monetary Economics 15 credits

    The purpose of the course is to provide students with a set of theoretical tools and concepts that will enable them to understand and systematically analyse the monetary side of the international economy.

    Key topics covered include the balance of payments, the determination of ex-change rates, interest rates, and prices in open economies, different exchange rate regimes (fixed vs. floating), the interdependence of economies, and international macroeconomic policy.

    We will also employ this theory to better understand recent issues such as the persistence of the US current account deficit; the creation of the Euro and the future of the US Dollar as the key international currency; the nature and consequences of financial crises.

    Students are expected to come out of this course with a deeper understanding of international monetary theory and related economic policy issues.

    *In order to study this module you must have taken Economics modules at level 4.

    15 credits. Liberalism and its Critics Liberalism and its Critics 15 credits

    With the collapse of ‘socialist’ regimes in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, liberalism today is a triumphant political theory and system. Yet from the moment of its birth, liberalism has been subjected to sharp criticism, and alternatives to it have been and continue to be urged. This module is an introduction to liberal theory; to the circumstances of its historical emergence and, in particular, to the concepts and values which are central to liberal thought.

    It aims to promote critical reflection upon the political and ethical values that underlie Western liberal democracies. Having examined the core values of liberalism, we proceed to consider critiques - communitarian, feminist and Marxist - of liberalism. A second aim of this subject is to promote intellectual engagement with, and evaluation of, critiques of liberal theory and of liberal society.

    15 credits. Life: A User's Manual Life: A User's Manual 15 credits

    This module sets out to analyse, critique and experiment with the politics of everyday life. It starts from the position that the study of daily life (or what the French call le quotidian) provides a necessary concrete specificity with which to address, engage with, or resist a range of important issues.

    In the module of our investigations, the insights of de Certeau, the Situationists, the Trapese Collective, CrimethInc and many others are extended into detailed investigations of the structures and mythologies of ‘everyday life’.

    15

BA (Hons) International Relations

Price on request