History and International Relations

Bachelor's degree

In London

£ 9,250 VAT inc.

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    London

  • Duration

    3 Years

  • Start date

    Different dates available

BA History and International Relations is an interdepartmental degree designed to develop your critical thinking and independence of thought about the past, and to bring this to bear on the key political and governmental challenges facing today’s world. The strength of the two world-leading King’s departments offering this degree - History and War Studies - ensures that an unrivalled range of modules are available.

Facilities

Location

Start date

London
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Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

About this course

The History Department is ranked 7th in Europe in the QS World University Rankings by Subject (2018)
Jointly offered by one of the strongest and largest History Departments in the world our unique and world-leading Department of War Studies; a leading centre for the study of international relations, conflicts and conflict resolution.
A new, cutting-edge programme, drawing on the best of both departments, and also on specialist expertise in the Departments of
European and International Studies, Political Economy, and the King’s Global Institutes.
Outstanding flexibility, enabling students to develop their specialist interests in a very wide range of areas, with support from experts on virtually all parts of the world.
Our location in the heart of London offers unrivalled access to the museums, libraries, historical sites, archives and cultural resources of the capital.
Excellent employment prospects: the combination of historical breadth with close engagement with contemporary world issues makes this degree an ideal preparation for careers in government, journalism, policy development, the NGO sector, and much more.
The combination of historical scope and close engagement with contemporary world issues makes this degree an ideal preparation for careers in government, journalism, policy development, the NGO sector, and much more.

You will have the opportunity to study abroad as part of your degree at King’s. Recent popular destinations include The University of North Carolina Chapel, The University of Auckland and The University of Hong Kong.

Please note that A-level General Studies, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills and Global Perspectives are not accepted by King's as one of your A-levels. However, if offered the grade achieved may be taken into account when considering whether or not to accept a candidate who has just fallen short of the conditions of their offer.

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Subjects

  • International Relations
  • Diplomacy
  • Politics
  • International
  • Credit
  • Relations
  • History
  • Relations theory
  • International Relations Theory
  • International History

Course programme

1st Year

Courses are divided into modules. Each year you will normally take modules totalling 120 credits.

Courses are divided into modules. Each year you will normally take modules totalling 120 credits.

In your first year you will take two required International Relations modules, equalling 60 credits; and one required History- based module, in addition to a further 30-credit module in Medieval, Early Modern, Modern or World history. We review required and optional modules on a regular basis. Please check for updates, or contact the Department of History and/or the Department of War Studies for further advice.

Required Modules

History:

  • Historical Sources, Skills and Approaches (30 credits)

International Relations:

  • International Relations Theory (30 credits)
  • International History (30 credits)
Optional Modules

History

You are also required to take one 30 credit module. Choose from a range of options, which may typically include:

  • The Making of Britain 400-1400 (30 credits)
  • Medieval Europe 400-1500 (30 credits)
  • Early Modern Britain 1500-1750 (30 credits)
  • Power, Belief & Culture in Europe 1500-1800 (30 credits)
  • Europe from 1793 to 1991 (30 credits)
  • Politics & Society in Britain, 1780-1945 (30 credits)
  • The Worlds of the British Empire, c1730- 1960 (30 credits)
  • World History, 1870s-2000s (30 credits)

International relations

There are no optional modules for International Relations in year one.

2nd Year

In your second year of study, you are required to take a 30-credit module on International History, taught by the History and International Relations staff. You are then required to choose a further 30-credit optional module from the International Relations area of the course as well as modules totalling 60 credits from the History section.

Second year students also have the opportunity to study abroad for the second semester of the second year. Current partner institutions include:

  • University of Auckland
  • Goethe Universität Frankfurt (German language required)
  • Hong Kong University
  • University of Melbourne
  • Monash University
  • National University of Singapore
  • University of North Carolina
  • University of Sydney
  • University of Oslo
  • University of British Columbia
  • University of Washington (Seattle)
  • George Washington University
  • University of Salamanca (Spanish language required)
  • University of Bologna (Italian language required)
  • Western University
Required Modules

History:

  • There are no required modules in year two.

International Relations:

  • The Long View: Understanding International Relations through History (30 credits)
Optional Modules

History

You are also required to take one 30-credit module from a wide range of optional modules, which may typically include:

  • The Northern Ireland Troubles (30 credits)
  • History of Feminism ( 30 credits)
  • The Black Death in England (30 credits)
  • Faraway so Close: The Middle East since 1800 (30 credits)
  • China: From Imperial State to People’s Republic (30 credits)
  • The Civilising Mission: French Imperialism since 1750 (30 credits)
  • War in the Pacific, 1898 to 1975 & beyond: Strategy & Diplomacy (30 credits)
  • An additional range of intercollegiate ‘Group II’ 30 credit modules offered by our partner colleges in the University of London

In addition you are required to take 30 credits (2 modules) from a range of optional 15-credit modules, which may typically include:

  • Atlantic Slavery: West Africa & the Caribbean, 1492-1807 (15 credits)
  • Europe in the Second World War (15 credits)
  • The Hundred Years War (15 credits)
  • Electric Cities : The Experience of Modernity in London, Melbourne, New York & Paris,1870 – 1929 (15 credits)
  • Orientalism, Race, Islam (15 credits)
  • Students may also take one optional 15 credit module offered elsewhere in the Faculty, including the Modern Language Centre.

International Relations

You are also required to take 30 credits from a range of optional modules, which may typically include:

  • History of The European Cold War (30 Credits)
  • Grand Strategy & The Foundations Of Anglo-American Statecraft (30 Credits)
  • History of Political Thought (30 Credits)
  • Empires and Imperialism and the History of the Modern World (30 Credits)
  • War in International Order (30 Credits)
  • Intelligence in War Studies (30 Credits)
  • War in the 20th Century (30 credits)
  • World War Il in Europe (30 Credits)
  • Military Strategy (30 Credits)
  • Global Politics (30 Credits)
  • Contemporary International Relations Theory (30 credits)
  • Statecraft and Diplomacy (30 credits)
  • International Law, Human Rights and Intervention (30 credits)
3rd Year

Required Modules

History

Final year students are required to take a 30-credit ‘special subject’ module from a wide range of options, which may typically include:

  • Romans and Barbarians: The Transformation of the Roman West 350-700 (30 credits)
  • The Enlightenment (30 credits)
  • The Experience of Power in Nigeria since 1900 (30 credits)
  • Red, White and Blues: Jazz and the United States in the 20th Century (30 credits)
  • Women & Gender in Early Modern England (30 credits)
  • Additional University of London Intercollegiate ‘special subject’ 30 credit modules

In addition, you are required to take either the special subject associated dissertation (30 credits) or the Free Long Standing Essay (30 credits), which can be on any subject of your choice.

International Relations

You are required to take 60 credits from a range of optional modules, which may typically include:

  • Diplomacy (30 credits)
  • A History of Nations Nationalism and Theories of the State (30 credits)
  • Power, Politics and Ethics in International Relations (30 credits)
  • The UN and Global Governance (30 credits)
  • The 9/11 Era Anglo American Foreign Policy since the end of the Cold War (30 credits)

King’s College London reviews the modules offered on a regular basis to provide up-to- date, innovative and relevant programmes of study. Therefore, modules offered may change. We suggest you keep an eye on the course finder on our website for updates.

Additional information

International Fee  - £18,900 per year.

History and International Relations

£ 9,250 VAT inc.