Department of International Relations

International Security (2013 entry)

MA, 1 year full time/2 years part time

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Subject overview

The Department of International Relations at Sussex is well-established over four decades and includes many distinguished scholars among its past and present faculty.

International relations and security draws on Sussex’s recognised reputation for interdisciplinarity. Working this way allows you to collaborate with colleagues from other disciplines, and to develop new understandings of the concept and issues of international relations and security.

Sussex was ranked in the top 3 International Relations departments in the UK in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). 95 per cent of our research was rated as internationally recognised, higher than any other UK department.

Our Department is committed to helping you identify work-study placements.

We have regional expertise that covers Europe and North America, the Middle East, East Asia, South Asia and Latin America. Our research and teaching cover a wide range of themes in international relations and security; the global political economy; international security, war and peace studies; development studies; law, ethics and gender; the environment; and religion, global health, humanitarian crises and global poverty.

The Department is located within the School of Global Studies, an interdisciplinary school that brings together anthropology, development studies, geography and international relations. The School also houses a number of interdisciplinary research centres.

Faculty have undertaken consultancy and commissioned work in a range of fields, including human rights, development studies, and security. Many of our graduates find employment in these fields, within which we have very strong international networks.

On our MA degrees in Conflict, Security and Development; Geopolitics and Grand Strategy; and International Security, you are encouraged, in addition to attending weekly lectures and seminars, to participate in:

  • an optional field trip to Brussels, with meetings at the EU and NATO headquarters
  • visiting practitioner and lecturer workshops on specific topics

The Sussex Centre for Conflict and Security Research is a leading research centre in the UK and provides a unique forum for original research in contemporary security and geopolitics.

Specialist facilities

The University offers extensive computing facilities with a full range of data-processing and communications software. Office space is usually allocated to students taking research degrees. You will have full access to the University’s main Library and its online collection, and to the British Library of Development Studies, at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), which is located on the Sussex campus.

Programme outline

This MA examines a wide range of contemporary security challenges. The past decade has demonstrated the continuing significance of military force in international affairs. While conventional warfare between states is currently rare, policy documents such as NATO’s Strategic Concept and the UK’s National Security Strategy emphasise the continued build-up of military capability in numerous regions and states around the world. These traditional elements of military power are now increasingly accompanied by technologies such as WMD (weapons of mass destruction), ballistic missile defence systems, electronic warfare and network-enabled capabilities, which have the potential to challenge existing balances of power and change the conduct of war. At the same time, transnational terrorism and ‘asymmetric’ threats continue while new issues have emerged on the international security agenda, with links being drawn between security and climate change, the spread of infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and avian flu, resource scarcity, state failure and complex emergencies in the global south. The result is that decision-makers and analysts are faced with an uncertain and forbiddingly complex security environment.

Providing advanced study of these key contemporary issues in international security, this MA investigates the means by which institutions and policy-makers have sought to respond to these challenges through military interventions, intelligence, diplomacy, the creation of international regimes, and international law. It also explores the many different understandings of ‘security’, and how these understandings have changed within the context of both globalisation and the rise of new security challenges.

Work placements

The School of Global Studies offers you support in finding a work placement, allowing you to gain experience in an area of work relating to your subject of study and to acquire practical skills in preparation for a professional career. Work placements run over a 12-week period in the summer term and vacation. If you take a work placement, you will have the opportunity to write a dissertation based on your experience.

We continue to develop and update our modules for 2013 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.

Autumn term: International Security • New Security Challenges. 

Spring term: you choose two from Death and Sex in World Politics • East Asia in the International System • Foreign Policy Analysis • Human Rights in International Relations • International Law in World Politics • Irregular Warfare • Militarism and the World Military Order • Peace Processes and Post-Conflict Reconstruction • Political Economy of the Environment • Queer IR • Religions, Cultures and Civilisations in International Relations • Rethinking Imperialism • Russian Foreign and Security Policy • Terror, Security and the State • The Global Politics of Disease and Biosecurity • The Middle East in Global Order • The Political Economy of Development • The Political Economy of Global Finance • War in World Politics. 

Summer term: you carry out work on your MA dissertation under the supervision of a member of faculty. 

Assessment 

International Security is assessed by a 5,000-word term paper. New Security Challenges is assessed by an unseen paper. Assessment of the spring-term options is by 5,000-word term papers. You will also write a 10,000-word dissertation. 

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East Asia and the International System

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The module enables you to gain an understanding of the rise of East Asia in the international political economy from the early 20th century until the present. You will critically examine East Asian development from within the context of broader geopolitical rivalries, and seek to explore how these rivaliries have shaped the transformations taking place in the region.

We will begin by historicising the recent transformations in East Asia and contextualising them within the longer purview of world history. We will examine the legacies of both European and Japanese imperialisms, followed by the role of the Cold War and of US hegemony in the region. As part of this historical survey, varying analytical frameworks and debates concerning late development and the rise of capitalism in the region will be examined and contextualised, including neoclassical economics, structural institutionalism, neo-Marxist theories of development such as dependency theory, and debates surrounding international versus comparative political economy.

We will also examine the post-war emergence of 'developmental state' forms in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, and the developmental and geopolitical context of the these states will be contrasted with those of Southeast Asia. The question of the so-called 'rise of China' and its implications for the regional and international political economy will be addressed, and one session will be devoted to the transformations of labour-capital relations in the region. We will also examine the causes and consequences of the East Asian economic and financial crisis, and will be end by exploring whether the centre of power in the international political is shifting from the West to Asia.

Global Politics of Disease and Biosecurity

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The importance of global health issues has traditionally been overlooked in the discipline of international relations. Today, however, globalisation processes are fanning the emergence of a host of pervasive diseases - ranging from infectious diseases, such as HIV/AIDS through to lifestyle diseases including cancer and obesity - that states, international institutions, and non-governmental organisations are urgently trying to come to grips with. The AIDS pandemic alone continues to kill three times more people every day than died as a result of the terrorist attacks on September 11th, 2001.

You will begin to theorise the ways in which diseases and globalisation are becoming increasingly linked, and analyses the various economic, political, social, legal, and security challenges that diseases pose for contemporary world politics. You will then evaluate the competing mainstream and critical approaches to global governance, paying particular attention to how they conceptualise health issues. Important questions you woll address include: how can global diseases be effectively governed in an international system divided into sovereign states? What are the political processes and economic interests driving the global governance of disease? And what, finally, are the complex ethical issues involved in responding to global health crises?

Human Rights in International Relations

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

On this module you will examine the process of internationalisation of human rights and the main factors that underpin that process, including the nature of the international order, the relationship between human rights and sovereignty of states, and the problematic of intervention and redistribution. You will contrast the use of human rights as instruments of foreign policy with the involvement of international non-governmental organisations. You will examine both the global and the regional legal, and contrast questions of cultural hegemony with those that claim legitimate cultural autonomy.

International Security

30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

Since the terrorist attacks of 11 September, 2001, the international community has become increasingly concerned with the quest for security. This module draws upon a variety of theoretical perspectives in security studies in order to analyse the complex ways in which the world order has been threatened by the events surrounding 9/11. The module is divided into three parts. It begins by outlining several competing concepts of security. The second part of the module then looks at various theoretical approaches to security, respectively focusing on the political, cultural, technological and ecological dimensions of security. The final part of the module considers evolving approaches to security based on notions of risk and biopolitics.

Irregular Warfare

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module gives you a strong foundation in the conceptual, strategic and ethical issues related to irregular warfare.

While looking at in-depth historical case studies of irregular warfare, the course will reveal how varieties of irregular warfare have risen to prominence during the 20th century. You will trace the evolutionary phases of insurgency and counter-insurgency, from the Maoist version of the 'people's war' to the development of a global jihad.

The module will particularly focus on the dilemmas and problems that conventional militaries have faced in trying to adapt to irregular warfare and explore the issue of whether or not the military is the ideal instrument in defeating insurgencies. This module, furthermore, aims to familiarise you to the sub-types of irregular warfare. It is useful (although not essential) to have a basic knowledge of 20th-century history, as this will comprise some of the case-study subject matter discussed on this course, but readings will be provided for all of the cases examined. 

New Security Challenges

30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

For much of the 20th century, security was defined in terms of the management of armed conflict between sovereign states, either alone or in alliance. With the end of the Cold War, new sources of insecurity were identified and a 'new agenda' for security policy emerged. Links have been drawn between security and previously unrelated phenomenon such as climate change and the spread of infectious diseases like HIV/AIDS. For some moreover, new policy approaches centering upon 'human security' rather than international and national security deepened linkages between security and development. 9/11, subsequent al-Qaeda type terrorism, coalition operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere and insurgent action against them further highlighted the relation between non-state actors, transnational networks, 'weak' or 'failed' states and the pursuit of security.

This wider agenda has seen an expansion of the kind of organisations and forms of expertise involved in security policy and practice, traditionally understood to be the preserve of state governments. Growing awareness of the dependence of conflict resolution and post-conflict stabilisation on local development and capacity building, for example, has meant increased emphasis on the role of humanitarian and development agencies. 9/11 and subsequent terrorism have also served to highlight the vulnerability of businesses and civilians, raising questions about where responsibility for security provision resides. The potential vulnerability of these actors and agencies meanwhile, has meant an expansion in private-sector security providers, whose services extend from intelligence analysis through to close protection.

Engaging this wide and constantly changing field, New Security Challenges offers an advanced overview of ten contemporary security topics. Each week, the course focuses on a particular issue, the form of threat involved and how institutions and policy makers have sought to respond.

Peace Processes and Post-Conflict Reconstruction

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module examines peace processes and post-conflict reconstruction within the context of transformations and continuities in international politics. This involves:

  • Analysing a number of individual peace processes and post-war reconstruction efforts, in each case examining them in their full local specificity, as well as within the context of international (or global) political, economic and social transformations;
  • Undertaking some comparative analysis of these individual peace processes and post-war reconstruction efforts, again within the context of international (or global) change;
  • Considering, at a more general level, how and why practices of peacemaking have changed over time, and been structured by broader patterns of politics and society, ie.undertaking an international historical sociology of peacemaking;
  • Considering, conversely, how practices and experiences of peacemaking have contributed to the shaping and reshaping of international orders;
  • Analysing peace processes and reconstruction through the lens of theoretical debates in peace studies, conflict resolution, international relations and global political economy.

Political Economy of Global Finance

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The main aim of this module is to help you build a systematic understanding of the political and social foundations of global financial markets, their operations and impacts on the world economy. You focuse on the problem of speculation, examining the various ways in which it has evolved and contributed to the development of finance. The module addresses questions such as: why do financial bubbles emerge? What type of practices sustains them? What are the different forms of speculative finance? This focus on speculation will serve to highlight the specificity of American finance and its role in redefining the political economy of advanced capitalist countries. After a theoretical and historical review, the module discusses various aspects of the process of financialisation and its social consequences. This provides an opportunity for familiarising you with various financial markets such as stock markets, derivative markets, housing markets, consumer credit, etc.

Religions, Cultures and Civilisations in International Relations

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module explores the implications of the `return' of religions, cultures and civilisations for world politics and for thinking about international relations. Many sociologists and philosophers have interpreted this return as the end of modernity or the de-secularisation of the world. For our purpose, the module will primarily focus on the renewed centrality of cultural, religious and civilisational identities as strategic frames of reference for politics in the post-Cold War world.

Against the background of the growing multicultural nature of contemporary international society resulting from what Hedley Bull has aptly termed the 'revolt against the West', we will try to problematise the implicit and predominant reading of religion in international relations as the ultimate threat to international order and stability, especially in the forms of the identity politics of the `new wars' and the terrorist attacks of religious fundamentalists. We will engage critically with Huntington's thesis of the 'clash of civilisations' by providing a more in depth discussion of the possible meaning and role of civilisations, civilizational identities and civilizational analysis in international relations. Finally, we will discuss the implications of this return for the future of the normative structure and world order of contemporary international society.

Research Methods and Professional Skills (IR)

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module provides you with training in social science research methods (generic as well as specific to their dissertation research) as well as with a set of professional skills that prepare you for a professional career. The module is run as a series of half-day workshops from which you select three workshops to match your specific needs, depending on disciplinary orientation, previous training and experience, future employment plans and personal interests. The workshops will cover a wide range of topics. The social research methods workshops will include interviewing, ethnographic methods, participatory research techniques, and questionnaire design. The professional skills workshops will include, for example, stakeholder engagement, sustainable livelihoods analysis, environmental impact assessment, project planning, and private sector consulting. The professional skills will also help to prepare those students planning to take a work placement over summer. As part of the module, you will also receive a workshop on dissertation planning and design.

Rethinking Imperialism

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module examines the historical practices and theoretical debates on imperialism. You set out the problems and issues raised in the current revival of the term imperialism in relation to contemporary world politics. You discuss classical conceptions of imperialism drawing on Marx, Weber, Schumpeter, Lenin, Luxemburg, Kautsky, etc whose writings informed the evolution, past and present, of the debate. This establishes the fundamental theoretical parameters of the topic. We study different practices of imperialism in historical context from the early modern colonial empires, via British free trade imperialism, to fascist imperial autarchy. Each session combines historical survey readings with influential contemporaneous and contemporary interpretations of the period we study. This will establish the intellectual resources, empirical and theoretical, towards an assessment of the current debates and forms of neo-imperialism, notably in relation to US policy. What can the history of imperialism and its rich theoretical discourse teach us about the causes, nature, and consequences of neo-imperialism in current world politics?

Sex and Death in Global Politics

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Sex and Death in Global Politics  explores the multiple connections between gender and violence in contemporary international politics in historical and theoretical perspective. War and other forms of collective violence seem to be everywhere in world affairs, but it has often been commented that the many manifestations of gender are less visible. At times aspects of gender violence (such as war rape) seem to enter into the realm of academic International
Relations, whilst other questions (such as the inclusion of homosexuals in the military) have relevance for public policy and national culture. But many other issues (such as media representations of gender violence, the continuum between 'peace' and 'war' violence, or the connection between armies and prostitution) are more commonly discussed within sociology, political theory and history. This module will examine a broad range of such questions from an inter-disciplinary angle, with a particular stress on theoretical perspectives and academicpolitical controversies.

Topics will include:

gender in war and society; the intersection of race, class, and gender in collective violence; military masculinity; women at war and the question of the 'feminine' in the perpetration of violence; wartime sexual violence; genocide and 'gendercide'; sex industries and violence; homosexuality and military culture (including queer theory perspectives and recent debates about 'pink-washing' and 'homonationalism'); feminism, anti-feminism and gender studies in the academy; gender and the ethics of war; and gender violence in popular culture.

Terror, Security and the State in Global Politics

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module offers an advanced level introduction to terrorism, state terror and security in global political context. Attending to case studies, academic literatures and primary sources the curriculum is divided into two sections. The first, 'Studying Terror: Conceptual Issues', offers a thematic exploration of terrorism and state terror, considering their historical development in modern societies; relation to other forms of organised violence; some of the animating ideas historically associated with the use of terror for political purposes; the phenomenon of `suicide terrorism' and the ideas, organisations and practices used by states in their efforts to counter terrorism. The second section, 'Cases and Contexts', situates terrorism and state terror within the changing context of state power, international and global politics, exploring the historical and contemporary relations between them.

The Middle East in Global Order

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The Middle East is almost constantly in the news. From Israel and the West Bank to Iraq and Saudi Arabia, the region is at once a byword for political instability, and a recurring site of Western political and military interventions. This module explores some of the political, economic and cultural dynamics that lie behind the crisis-ridden headlines. You examine the emergence of the Middle East from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire and the specificities of the modern state-formation processes in the Middle East. You study the interplay of the international and domestic factors in the Middle Eastern states and societies looking at their political economies and patterns of development. You critically investigate the problems of authoritarianism and democratic change in the Middle East. The module also engages in more in depth analysis of some important contemporary phenomena in the Middle East such as political Islam, The Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Iraq War, and the 'Arab Spring'.


We start by examining some key methodological and theoretical debates in the study of the Middle East. We then move on to consider the processes of modern state formation and the legacies of (neo)colonialism and imperialism. We then consider the impacts of neo-liberalism on Middle Eastern polities and economies, international (geo)political economy of the region with special reference to oil, and the theme of human development including gender issues in the Middle East. We then examine some key political forms and forces, including the authoritarian 'rentier' state, processes of democratisation and liberalisation, and political Islam. The final part of the course concentrates on three particularly important issues in contemporary Middle East: the causes and consequences of the Iranian Revolution and the 'Arab Spring', Arab-Israeli conflicts, and the Iraq War.

The Political Economy of Development

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The module examines the political economy of development, focusing on how changes at the international level affect developing countries' national-level strategies for interaction with and integration into the global economy. You will focus on the performance of the world economy as a whole, and on international systems for production, trade, finance, including the principles and rules upon which interaction on a world scale is based. You will consider how countries and firms are integrated into the world system and the barriers and opportunities they face in upgrading and moving up the global income ladder. You will examine how labour has been affected by, and affects, the process of globalisation, and in contrast to most thinking in international political economy, address these issues from the perspective of the low and middle-income countries.

You will gain an understanding of how less developed countries (LDC) have been, and are being integrated into the world system, consider how the nature of the world system influences the form of integration, and discuss alternative forms of integration that lead to more favourable developmental outcomes for LDC's.

The Political Economy of International Security

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module will explore the relationship between the global political economy and the politics of international security, with emphasis on theoretical and conceptual analysis of issue areas lying at this intersection. You will engage with the main theoretical approaches to the political economy of security, exploring how these approaches conceptualise the manner in which the economy functions, its relationship to political practices, the role of the state, and the nature of world order. With this foundation in place, students will then examine many of the key issues at the intersection of political economy and global security, from traditional geopolitical issues of energy security and arms production to emerging challenges of cybersecurity, private security governance and the security-development nexus.

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Entry requirements

UK entrance requirements

A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree, preferably in a humanities or social science subject. Relevant degrees include economics, geography, history, law, philosophy, political science and sociology. A degree in the social sciences or humanities does not constitute a strict requirement and applicants with degrees in other disciplines will be given due consideration. Relevant work experience will also be considered, particularly in cases where candidates fall short of the academic requirement.

Overseas entrance requirements

Please refer to column A on the Overseas qualifications.

If you have any questions about your qualifications after consulting our overseas qualifications table, contact the University.
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

Visas and immigration

Find out more about Visas and immigration.

English language requirements

IELTS 6.5, with not less than 6.5 in Writing and 6.0 in the other sections. Internet TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 20 in Reading, 22 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.

For more information, refer to English language requirements.

Additional admissions information

If you are a non-EU student and your qualifications (including English language) do not yet meet our entry requirements for admission directly to this degree, we offer a Pre-Masters entry route. For more information, refer to Pre-Masters.

For more information about the admissions process at Sussex

For pre-application enquiries:

Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

For post-application enquiries:

Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk 

Fees and funding

Fees

Home UK/EU students: £5,5001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £5,5002
Overseas students: £13,0003

1 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.

To find out about your fee status, living expenses and other costs, visit further financial information.

Funding

The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree.

To find out more about funding and part-time work, visit further financial information.

Sussex Graduate Scholarship (2013)

Region: UK, Europe (Non UK), International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 16 August 2013

Open to final year Sussex students who graduate with a 1st or 2:1 degree and who are offered a F/T place on an eligible Masters course in 2013.

Faculty interests

The Department houses the Centre for Global Political Economy and hosts the New Security Challenges lecture series. A number of faculty and students are members of the Justice and Violence Research Centre. Research interests are briefly described below. For more information, visit the Department of International Relations.

Dr Andreas Antoniades Globalisation, hegemony. Author of Producing Globalisation (2009). 

Dr Shane Brighton International relations theory, terrorism and counterterrorism. 

Professor Steve Burman US foreign policy. 

Dr Sergio Catignani Middle East Security. Author of Israeli Counter-Insurgency and the Intifadas (2008). 

Professor Stefan Elbe International security. Author of Security and Global Health (2010). 

Dr Kevin Gray Labour and globalisation. 

Professor Beate Jahn Classical and contemporary political and international theory. 

Zdenek Kavan Nationalism, democracy and citizenship in Eastern and Central Europe. 

Dr Samuel Knafo Global finance, international political economy, historical sociology. 

Dr Kamran Matin Politics of Iran, political Islam, international politics of revolution. 

Francis McGowan Policy making in the European Union, European government/ industry relations. 

Professor Peter Newell Global environmental governance. Author of Governing Climate Change (2010). 

Dr Louiza Odysseos Global ethics. 

Dr Stefanie Ortmann International relations theory, state and identity. 

Dr Patricia Owens History and theory of warfare. 

Dr Fabio Petito Religion and international relations. Co-editor of Civilizational Dialogue and World Order (2009). 

Professor Kees van der Pijl Transnational classes. 

Professor Justin Rosenberg International relations and international political economy, modernity. 

Dr Jan Selby Resource politics. Author of The Global Politics of Oil (forthcoming). 

Dr Ben Selwyn Globalisation and development, economic development in Brazil. 

Professor Martin Shaw Global civil society, genocide. 

Dr Anna Stavrianakis NGOs and global civil society. Author of Taking Aim at the Arms Trade (2010). 

Dr Benno Teschke Marxism, historical sociology, critical theory and dialectic, international theory. 

Dr Adrian Treacher International relations of the EU, European security, French foreign policy. 

Professor Cynthia Weber Media and culture. Author of International Relations Theory: A Critical Introduction (2009). 

Careers and profiles

This MA aims to bridge the gap between theory and practice, and is intended for those hoping to pursue, or who are seconded from, a professional career in international security or in the analysis of current international security affairs as a policy advisor, journalist or researcher. It will also appeal to students intending to pursue postgraduate research in international security. Our graduates have gone on to pursue careers in government foreign, defence and interior ministries; international organisations (eg NATO); international media or journalism; academia; and security agencies and companies.

For more information, visit Careers and alumni.

School and contacts

School of Global Studies

The School of Global Studies aims to provide one of the UK's premier venues for understanding how the world is changing. It offers a broad range of perspectives on global issues, and staff and students are actively engaged with a wide range of international and local partners, contributing a distinctive perspective on global affairs.

International Relations,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877686
E irpg@sussex.ac.uk
Department of International Relations

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