Globalisation: history, politics, culture ba(hons)

Bachelor's degree

In Brighton and Hove

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Brighton and hove

  • Duration

    3 Years

  • Start date

    Different dates available

This distinctive course explores the historical and contemporary dimensions of globalisation, drawing on disciplines including politics and history.
It will give you the means to think critically about crucial world issues and ask, and answer, fundamental questions about our globalised experience.
You will study key global issues and challenges, past and present, including: migration, human rights, racism and imperialism, development, the West and the Middle East, decolonization and environmental sustainability, all in an international context. Learning in small, participatory seminar groups, you will be taught by published, research-active academic experts who are passionate about the subject.
The knowledge and skills gained on the degree mean you will graduate ready to enter a number of rewarding industries, including journalism, politics, publishing, teaching, NGO and charity work, business or academia.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Brighton and Hove (East Sussex)
See map

Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

About this course

Entry requirements
A-levels or BTEC
Entry requirements are in the range of A-level BCC–CCC (104–96 UCAS Tariff points), or BTEC Extended Diploma DMM–MMM. Our conditional offers typically fall within this range.
We will generally make you an offer if your predicted grades are at the top of this range. If your predicted grades are towards the lower end of this range we may still make you an offer if you have a good GCSE (or equivalent) profile or relevant non-academic achievements.
International Baccalaureate
27 points.
Access to HE Diploma.
Pass with 60 credits overall ts for...

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Subjects

  • History Politics
  • Democracy
  • Global
  • International
  • Environmental Sustainability
  • Politics

Course programme

Year 1

In year 1 you take six modules that help develop the skills central to your course.

Modules
  • Historical Inquiry

    This module will introduce you to the practice of historical inquiry through an exploration of various approaches to the study of the experience of crisis and conflict in the mid-twentieth century.

  • Philosophical Inquiry

    This module will introduce you to fundamental concepts and basic methodologies in critical and philosophical theory.

  • Studying Cultures

    This module will introduce you to fundamental concepts and basic methodologies in cultural studies, focusing on the distinction between ‘lived cultures’ and ‘cultural texts’, grounded in case studies from Britain in the period 1968–74.

  • Democracy: From Athens to Baghdad

    This module will introduce you to fundamental concepts and basic methodologies in democratic theory.

    Democracy as a contested term goes to the heart of debates about the exercise of power in the contemporary world, and is not solely about governance. This module will introduce you to the histories and contexts within which the concept and practice of democracy developed. You will study classical, republican, liberal, anarchist, Marxist, communitarian, and global conceptualisations of democracy. In each case the cultural, political and historical context of these practices of government will be critically discussed and their relevance to current circumstances considered.

    The module addresses the cultural preconditions for democratic freedoms and the representation of democratic values in the social and political movements which have fought to establish democratic freedoms. It will also introduce the different forms of inequality that characterise most democracies.

  • Understanding Society in a Global World

    In this module you will be introduced to interdisciplinary methodologies in the social sciences, explore theories of international relations and globalisation, and apply these to important questions concerning living in a global world.

    You will interrogate the claims of social scientists to produce verifiable knowledge about the social world, and evaluate the political implications of different methodological approaches for the study of key aspects of global society. You will explore how concepts and theories are applied to contested aspects of global society, notably environmental sustainability and war/conflict.

  • Approaching Narratives

    This module will introduce you to key methodologies and concepts in the formal study of narrative, while encouraging you to critically reflect on how narratives construct particular visions of our world.

    The module focuses specifically on issues of narrative structure, ideology, language, and semiotics across a range of visual and textual forms including television and film, news media, imaginative fiction, photography, the internet and a psychiatric ‘case study’. You will interrogate the importance of narrative voice, narrative development and closure in the production of meaning, and critically engage with the role of the reader in relation to critical interpretation and understanding.

It has been said that arguing against globalisation is like arguing against the laws of gravity.

Kofi Annan, former UN secretary-general

Globalisation: history, politics, culture ba(hons)

Price on request