School of Global Studies

Marxism and IR (M1530A)

Marxism and International Relations

Module M1530A

Module details for 2009 cohort.

30 credits

FHEQ Level 6

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course:
1. Students will have acquired a basic but rigorous understanding of the nature and scope of Marxism as an intellectual tradition;
2. They should be familiar with the principal ways in which it has been applied to International Relations;
3. They should have developed skills of close textual reading, together with an appreciation of the strengths and weaknesses of a systematic social theory;
4. They should have developed basic IT skills involved in accessing course materials on the course web pages;
5. They will have experience of conceiving and producing a substantial work of analysis and argument, presented in accordance with professional scholarly standards.

Module Outline

This course enables you to engage systematically with the Marxist tradition of theorising about international relations. It provides an introduction to Marx's own thought, using selections from primary texts, and then examines how later Marxist writers have applied and developed these ideas across a range of themes in international studies, including imperialism, the Cold War, international political economy and globalisation theory.

TypeTimingWeighting
Dissertation (7000 words)Spring Term Week 1 Wed 16:00100.00%
Timing

Submission deadlines may vary for different types of assignment/groups of students.

Weighting

Coursework components (if listed) total 100% of the overall coursework weighting value.

Prof Justin Rosenberg

Convenor
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/profiles/102452

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