Msc migration, culture and global health blizard institute
Postgraduate
In London
Description
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Type
Postgraduate
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Location
London
Overview
This recently re-developed MSc aims to enable students to explore the central role that is played by migration and culture within global health processes and migration and health policy and practice. It will develop students’ empirical and theoretical understandings of the range of health, wellness and healthcare concerns that are experienced by migrants and their families and how these occur across interconnected development contexts of ‘origin’, ‘destination’, ‘return’ and ‘transit’ countries. In completing the MSc, students’ will have developed the skills and knowledge that are needed to work with migrant community groups, health support groups, advocacy organisations, non-governmental and intergovernmental organisations, as well as government agencies and trade unions. In doing so, it will prepare them for employment within the fields of community organising, migration support services, migration and health policy, migration policy, public health and humanitarian policy and practice at the local, regional, national and international levels. Within these fields, students will be able to apply academic learning on migration and health to respond to problems and opportunities related to migrants' social, cultural and political identities, social welfare, humanitarian needs, and their legal, citizenship and rights-based concerns, especially those that intersect with health and healthcare.
Students will also have developed research-based skills to work in research-related posts, while some graduates may continue their academic trajectory by developing funding proposals to pursue doctoral study in the Centre for Primary Care & Public Health, within Queen Mary more broadly, or beyond.
The Migration, Culture and Global Health MSc is part of a wider programme of study in global health within the Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry.
Why study Migration, Culture and Global Health at Queen Mary? ll group seminars and...
Facilities
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Start date
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This centre's achievements
All courses are up to date
The average rating is higher than 3.7
More than 50 reviews in the last 12 months
This centre has featured on Emagister for 14 years
Subjects
- Part Time
- Healthcare
- Public
- Global
- Primary
- Public Health
Course programme
Structure
This new and updated MSc programme is available for study for one year full-time, or two years part-time.
In the first semester, modules develop the key concepts and research methods and analysis. These present you with relevant methodological issues and challenges while providing interdisciplinary foundations. In the second semester, you gain a more detailed understanding of areas relevant to your interests through specialist and elective modules.
Core modules- new and updated for 2018-19!- Epidemiology and Statistics
- Evidence, Policy and Global Health
- NEW core module- Migrants, Inequality and the Cultural Politics of Health
- Health Systems, Policy and Practice
- Dissertation
- NEW Governance of Migration, Displacement and Healthcare
- NEW Researching Global Health and Biomedicine- Geneva Field Class*
- Gender, Sexuality and Health
- Primary Care and Global Public Health
- Anthropology and Global Health
- Health Systems Theory, Policy and Political Economy
- Global Health, Governance and Law
- Ecological Global Health
- Human Rights and Public Health
- Globalisation and Contemporary Medical Ethics
- Understanding and Managing Human Resources for Global Health
- Economics of Development
- Human Resource Management in the Public Services
Our core modules are studied in the first semester only, from the third week of September to mid December.
Optional and specialist modules are studied in the second semester only, from the second week of January to the end of March.
*Additional associated cost for flights and accommodation
Full-timeUndertaking a master’s programme is a serious commitment, with weekly contact hours being in addition to numerous hours of independent learning and research needed to progress at the required level. When coursework or examination deadlines are approaching independent learning hours may need to increase significantly. Each module you study is worth 15 credits. University guidelines suggest that for every 15 credits, a student will need to study for 150 hours. You will usually have one 1-hour lecture and one 2-hour seminar per module, per week. You should expect to be on campus at least 3 days a week.
Part-timeOur part-time study options mean you can complete this MSc over two years. This MSc programme consist of four core modules, one specialist module and three optional modules and finally a dissertation, worth a total of 180 credits.
A part time student is required to take two of the core modules worth 15 credits in semester one of the first year. In the second semester of the first year, a part time student will take one specialist module and one optional module of 15 credits each. The first year teaching is completed by early April, and final assessments submitted by the end of May.
In the second year a part time student will take the other two core modules worth 15 credits in semester one, and in the second semester they would take a further two optional modules worth 15 credits. In the second year a part time student would research and write their 10,000 to 12,000 word dissertation, worth 60 credits. This is usually submitted in August.
University guidelines suggest that for every 15 credits, a student will need to study for 150 hours. This is worth considering when thinking about studying part time. You will usually have one 1-hour lecture and one 2-hour seminar per module per week.
Distance LearningThis programme is not currently available as distance learning, although we hope to make this available in the future. Contact us for further information.
ContactMsc migration, culture and global health blizard institute