MA, 1 year full time/2 years part time
Subject overview

View our media gallery
Contemporary European studies at Sussex was ranked joint second in the UK for research in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). 90 per cent of our research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and 60 per cent rated as internationally excellent or higher.
The Sussex European Institute (SEI), a Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence for the study of European integration, consolidates the University’s position among the leading international centres of graduate training and research in European studies.
SEI comprises a vibrant community of scholars, visiting practitioners and academic fellows.
Research in the Institute focuses on four themes:
- European integration and political economy, including the single market, structural funds, the EU budget, trade policy, comparative welfare and labour markets
- representative politics in Europe, focusing on political parties, democracy and electoral politics
- internal/external security challenges to the EU, covering justice and home affairs, and European security policy and defence
- migration and citizenship, including migration politics and policies, immigrant integration, and European citizenship and the European public sphere.
SEI provides an excellent environment for research students with its Research-in- Progress seminar series and its own tailored Professional Development Workshop series.
SEI is home to the journals Government and Opposition, Party Politics, German Politics and the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (JEMS) and the European Parties Elections and Referendums Network (EPERN).
- Specialist facilities
-
The University Library is a European Documentation Centre, and Library holdings in the fields of European institutions, economics and politics are particularly strong. The excellent Sussex Centre for Language Studies is on campus, which provides taught modules and self-study facilities for a wide range of European languages, both east and west.
- Academic activities
-
The Sussex European Institute organises a Research-in-Progress seminar series that runs for most of the year. Here faculty members and visitors introduce work related to current research projects in the field of contemporary European studies.
Programme outline
Students taking taught degrees are based in the Sussex European Institute. A study visit to Brussels is offered to MA students in the summer term.
The MA has pan-European coverage, with a wide-ranging core module followed by a variety of specialised options.
The course is aimed at graduates in social sciences who wish to add a European dimension to their knowledge, and at graduates in humanities subjects such as languages or history who wish to gain a social sciences background. You may select for yourself a general approach to European studies, or you may specialise by area according to your choice of options.
Assessment
You are assessed by an unseen examination and a 2,000-word essay for the core module, two 5,000-word term papers on two of the options, plus a dissertation of up to 15,000 words on your third option.
We continue to develop and update our modules for 2014 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: you take the core module The Making of Contemporary Europe.
Spring term: you choose three options from Domestic Politics of European Integration • Energy and Environmental Security in Europe • European Political Integration • European Union Justice and Home Affairs • EU Single Market Law • Political Parties and Party Systems • Territorial Politics • The International Relations of the EU • The Political Economy of EU Integration • The Politics of Eastern Europe in Transition • The Politics of Immigration. Note that availability of options depends on student demand and faculty availability.
Summer term: you research and write a dissertation on a topic of your choice under supervision of a member of faculty.
Current modules
Please note that these are the core modules and options (subject to availability) for students starting in the academic year 2012.
Core modules
Options
- Energy and Environmental Security in Europe
- EU Single Market Law
- European Political Integration
- European Union Justice and Home Affairs
- Political Economy of EU Integration
- Political Parties and Party Systems in Comparative Perspective
- Politics of Immigration
- Territorial Politics in Europe
- The Domestic Politics of European Integration
- The International Relations of the European Union
- The Politics of Eastern Europe in Transition
The Domestic Politics of European Integration
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module examines the impact of the European integration process, politics and institutions on the domestic politics of European states. We will look at the impact of the European issue on political parties, party systems, referendums and public opinion. We will explicitly link the fields of EU and comparative European politics with cases primarily drawn from the member states of the European Union. Throughout the course, we will address both the theoretical literature (in asking what different approaches to European integration have to say about the domestic politics of member states), and the empirical literature looking at a number of specific areas, namely European referendums, European Parliament elections, the impact of Europe in domestic elections and party systems and the structure of public opinion on European integration in member states.
European Union Justice and Home Affairs
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module provides an advanced analysis of the origins, the policy-making process and major policy issues in cooperation in the fields of justice and home affairs at the Union level. Its main aim is to equip you with the concepts and instruments necessary for the professional analysis of this still relatively young but fast expanding area of EU politics. The module will focus on the practice of decision-making in the Union institutions and the identification of the key factors determining the development of EU cooperation in the various policy fields covered by the EU treaty objective of establishing an 'area of freedom, security and justice', including specific priorities and problems of individual Member States. The module will also provide an analysis of the Schengen system, the relevant current treaty provisions, the state of implementation of the 2010-2014 Stockholm Programme, specific problems of the enlargement process, the growing international dimension of EU justice and home affairs and the implications of the Lisbon Treaty reforms. The module will to a significant extent rely on the use of official documents of the EU and the Member States with whose main categories you will be familiarised at the beginning.
EU Single Market Law
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
The 'single' or 'internal' market lies at the very heart of the European community, defined by reference to the 'four freedoms' - policies on the free movement of goods, persons, services and capital destined to ensure an ever closer economic, monetary and political union.
You will examine the legal foundations of the single market tracing the deployment of both 'negative' and 'positive' integration mechanisms together with the use of various legal and judicial techniques destined to achieve completion of the internal market. While concentrating particularly on the free movement regimes applicable to goods, establishment and services, the module will investigate the interaction of these key policy areas with other issues such as social welfare provision, the rights and duties of private parties and the protection of fundamental rights.
Energy and Environmental Security in Europe
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This course addresses the growing importance of security as an issue for energy and environmental policy and analyses the way in which different concepts of security have emerged (or re-emerged) to redefine policy priorities in both areas. While global developments form an important context to the course, our primary focus is European, taking Europe not only as major source of energy demand and environmental damage but also as an important protagonist. We will examine how EU energy and environmental policies have sought to address security issues internally and externally, the latter in its bilateral, neighbourhood and multilateral diplomacy.
European Political Integration
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
The aim of this module is to analyse the development trends and the institutional set-up of the European Union as the main framework of European political integration and as a sui generis political system.
The objectives are: to explain the political and legal dynamics of EC/EU integration and of the specificities of the institutional order it has generated; to analyse and evaluate the internal organisation and functioning of the main EU institutions; to offer substantial insights into practice of decision-making in the EU system; to identify specific strengths and weaknesses of the EU as a legislator and an economic and political actor in international relations; to evaluate both the challenges posed to the political and institutional system of the EU by enlargement and major reform trends; to familiarise participants with the use of official EU sources.
The International Relations of the European Union
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module gives a broad introduction to the ideas and issues related to the EU's role in global affairs. It commences with an analysis of the Union's emergence as an international actor, and a brief survey of the role played by the various EU institutions. You then analyse the political context of five different, but nevertheless inter-related, aspects of the EU's engagement in foreign policy: CFSP (Common Foreign and Security Policy), ESDP (European Security and Defence Policy), conflict prevention and non-military instruments of foreign policy, the external dimension of the EU's internal security policy and international development. Over three weeks, you then assess the Union's relations with its peripheries to the east and south and to the west.
Political Parties and Party Systems in Comparative Perspective
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Political parties are one of the main representative linkages in liberal democracies and the study of parties and party systems has long constituted a major focus of concern in comparative political studies. This module wants to address the following questions: where did parties and party systems come from? How have they changed? Are they all the same? And where are they going? Therefore the module offers you an understanding of the development of political parties and party systems and their importance in contemporary European democracies. Although the primary empirical focus is on the development of parties and party systems in Western Europe, the module is designed primarily as a tool rather than a survey, in order to allow you to use theoretical and analytical models to study parties and party systems in particular countries
Political Economy of EU Integration
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module will examine the process and economic consequences of economic integration in the EU. You use some economic theory to analyse the positive and normative aspects of integration but the module requires an interest in economic issues rather than any formal training. It will place emphasis on the external as well as the internal dimensions of EU integration in order to show both the development of EU relations with trading partners and also the way in which the need for a common response to external challenges has influenced the strategy of EU development. Particular emphasis will be given to the political economy on EU enlargement and deeper integration with the EU's neighbourhood.
The Politics of Eastern Europe in Transition
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module surveys the politics of Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 to the present by exploring the process of democratic transition and consolidation. It aims to identify the specific characteristics and features of post-communist politics in the newly democratic states of Central and Eastern Europe by studying examples within the analytical frameworks normally employed for the study of more established Western democracies. It also examines the particular challenges posed by the process of integrating post-communist states into Western political, economic and security structures.
Politics of Immigration
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Immigration is one of the most contested and divisive issues on the political agenda of liberal democratic states. This module examines the political dynamics and processes that shape how liberal states seek to govern immigration and immigrants. It explores how constitutive features of liberal statehood, including representative democracy, capitalist political economy, constitutionalism, and nationhood, create conflicting imperatives for migration governance, leading to paradoxical outcomes of both openness and closure. You will gain knowledge about recent immigration, integration, and citizenship policies, and acquire an analytical understanding of how political processes shape those policies. The module focuses on the politics of immigration in Europe, though comparative experiences from North America are also addressed
Territorial Politics in Europe
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module analyses the influence of territory on political processes and political outcomes. Since the 1960s European political systems have all – to greater or lesser extents – been forced to adapt to demands for a 'territorialisation' of political affairs. Indeed, more or less every nation-state has been by affected by processes of federalisation, regionalisation and/or devolution. In short, territory matters in understanding how politics functions in democratic states more than at any time in living memory. You subsequently explore how this territorial challenge came about, why it matters and whether further territorialisation is to be expected.
You will analyse both how territorial governance functions (eg multi-level governance, federalism, or regionalism), and what the nature of the territorial challenge is. You will consider how elections to new or reinvigorated territorial institutions (eg the Scottish Parliament, the Spanish Autonmous Communities, the German Laender and so forth) matter and how voters perceive them. You will also analyse how state-wide politics has been affected by increasingly powerful sub-state administrations, and whether there has been a much vaunted hollowing out of the nation-state as well as analysing particular sets of policy challenges posed by contemporary territoral politics.
The Making of Contemporary Europe
60 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1
This module introduces you to the politics, economics and society of contemporary Europe. You will study Europe as a whole – covering East and West, North and South, and spending a large amount of time looking at Central and Eastern Europe, which most European studies programmes often neglect.The course locates the main themes of post-war European history in a theoretical and comparative context, to help you understand contemporary developments within a broader conceptual framework. You will take an inter-disciplinary approach, explicitly looking for the connections between different disciplines in order to understand the key issues of contemporary European governance, such as the political and economic implications of EMU.
Central themes you will address include: the historical tension between the two models of economic, political and social organisation (liberal, capitalist West European and communist, totalitarian centrally-planned East European) that has dominated the post-war period and divided the continent; the European project, understood as European integration in the widest sense; and the extent to which Europe is a separate and distinctive civilisation with a fundamental unity.
Entry requirements
UK entrance requirements
A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in a humanities, languages or social sciences subject, but applicants from other academic backgrounds may be considered.
Overseas entrance requirements
- Overseas qualifications
-
If your country is not listed below, please contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
Country Overseas qualification Australia Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division Brazil Bacharel, Licenciado or professional title with a final mark of at least 8 Canada Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3/4.0 (grade B+) China Bachelor degree from a leading university with overall mark of 75%-85% depending on your university Cyprus Bachelor degree or Ptychion with a final mark of at least 7.5 France Licence with mention bien or Maîtrise with final mark of at least 13 Germany Bachelor degree or Magister Artium with a final mark of 2.4 or better Ghana Bachelor degree from a public university with second-class upper division Greece Ptychion from an AEI with a final mark of at least 7.5 Hong Kong Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division India Bachelor degree from a leading institution with overall mark of at least 60% or equivalent Iran Bachelor degree (Licence or Karshenasi) with a final mark of at least 15 Italy Diploma di Laurea with an overall mark of at least 105 Japan Bachelor degree from a leading university with a minumum average of B+ or equivalent Malaysia Bachelor degree with class 2 division 1 Mexico Licenciado with a final mark of at least 8 Nigeria Bachelor degree with second-class upper division or CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 Pakistan Four-year bachelor degree, normally with a GPA of at least 3.3 Russia Magistr or Specialist Diploma with a minimum average mark of at least 4 South Africa Bachelor (Honours) degree or Bachelor degree in Technology with an overall mark of at least 70% Saudi Arabia Bachelor degree with an overall mark of at least 70% or CGPA 3.5/5.0 or equivalent South Korea Bachelor degree from a leading university with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent Spain Licenciado with a final mark of at least 2/4 Taiwan Bachelor degree with overall mark of 70%-85% depending on your university Thailand Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent Turkey Lisans Diplomasi with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 depending on your university United Arab Emirates Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent USA Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3-3.5/4.0 depending on your university Vietnam Masters degree with CGPA 3.5/4.0 or equivalent If you have any questions about your qualifications after consulting our overseas qualifications, contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
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.
Visas and immigration
Find out more about Visas and immigration.
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
Related programmes
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.
Chancellor's International Scholarship (2014)
Region: International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 1 May 2014
25 scholarships of a 50% tuition fee waiver
Fulbright-Sussex University Award (2014)
Region: International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 15 October 2013
Each year, one award is offered to a US citizen for the first year of a postgraduate degree in any field at the University of Sussex.
Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Postgraduate Study (2014)
Region: UK
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 1 October 2013
The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Postgraduate students following any postgraduate degree courses in any subject.
Santander Scholarship (2014)
Region: International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 1 May 2014
Two scholarships of £5000 fee waiver for students studying any postgraduate taught course.
Sussex ESRC 1+3 and +3 Scholarships (2014)
Region: UK, Europe (Non UK)
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 28 February 2014
Up to 22 1+3 and +3 awards across the social sciences
USA Friends Scholarships (2014)
Region: International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 3 April 2014
Two scholarships of an amount equivalent to $10,000 are available to nationals or residents of the USA on a one year taught Master's degree course.
Faculty interests
Research interests are briefly described below. For more detailed information, visit the Sussex European Institute.
Dr Sabina Avdagic Comparative political economy, the politics of market reforms, national variation in politico-economic institutions.
Dr Sue Collard French politics, the politics of culture, European citizenship.
Professor Gerard Delanty Social and political theory, philosophy of social science, identity.
Professor Mick Dunford Comparative regional and urban economic performance, inequality and social cohesion in Europe, and theories of regulation.
Dr James Hampshire The politics of race, ethnicity and citizenship; modern political theory; public policy.
Dr Peter Holmes International economics.
Dr Dan Hough German politics, party politics, post-communism in Europe, political corruption.
Dr Kate Lacey Gender, media and the public sphere. Has published widely on radio history and theory. Current work focuses on listening publics.
Francis McGowan Policy making in the European Union, European government/ industry relations.
Professor Alan Mayhew Transition and integration in Europe, political economy of transition, institutional economics.
Professor Susan Millns Law of the EU Single Market. Co-Director of SEI.
Dr Emily Robinson British political history, politics of time, progress and progressivism, nostalgia, heritage and tradition.
Emeritus Professor Jim Rollo Economics of EU integration.
Professor Malcolm Ross EU Law, competition law, law and citizenship.
Professor Aleks Szczerbiak Comparative politics of central eastern Europe, lustration and de-communisation, Poland. Co-Director of SEI.
Professor Paul Statham Europe and the public sphere, migration and ethnic relations in Europe.
Professor Paul Taggart Euroscepticism, populism, party politics.
Dr Adrian Treacher International relations of the EU, European security, French foreign policy.
Professor Paul Webb Parties and elections – UK and comparative, empirical democratic theory.
Careers and profiles
Our graduates have gone on to careers in:
- governments all over the world, foreign service, and the EU
- NGOs in the human rights and security fields
- international organisations such as the UN or NATO
- academia: a further degree, doctoral study or teaching
- journalism and the media.
Maria's perspective
'Coming to Sussex to study for an MA in Contemporary European Studies, based in the Sussex European Institute (SEI), a Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, has proved to be a very good decision. Settling into the system here has been easy, particularly because during the autumn term we were assigned a tutor whom we could consult whenever we needed to.
‘Research in Contemporary European studies at Sussex is highly rated, and the faculty at SEI come from different fields such as politics, European studies and history, so you get a truly interdisciplinary experience. Also, rather than focusing on particular areas of Europe, as some programmes do, this degree covers the whole region. Another advantage is that you get the opportunity to meet many people from different countries.
‘In the summer term, SEI organises a study trip to Brussels, during which students visit various institutions there and have the opportunity to carry out interviews and gather pertinent information. It’s a real bonus.
‘This MA offers an interesting and up-to-date programme in one of the best universities in the UK, and Brighton is on your doorstep. What more could you ask for?’
Maria Baldacchino
MA in Contemporary European Studies
For more information, visit Careers and alumni.
School and contacts
School of Law, Politics and Sociology
Engaging with key issues of contemporary concern, the School of Law, Politics and Sociology brings together academic units that are committed to excellence in teaching, and recognised nationally for research.
Dr Sue Collard, Sussex European Institute,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SP, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877654
F +44 (0)1273 873162
E sei@sussex.ac.uk
Sussex European Institute
Postgraduate Open Day 2013
4 December 2013, 1pm-4pm
Bramber House, University of Sussex
- talk to academic faculty and current postgraduate students
- subject talks and presentations on postgraduate study, research and funding
- choose from our exciting range of taught Masters and research degrees
- find out how postgraduate study can improve your career prospects
- get details of our excellent funding schemes for taught postgraduate study.
To register your interest in attending, visit Postgraduate Open Day.
Can’t make it to our Postgraduate Open Day? You might be interested in attending one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions.
Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions
If you can’t make it to our Postgraduate Open Day, you’re welcome to attend one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions. These are held in the spring and summer terms and enable you to find out more about postgraduate study and the opportunities Sussex has to offer.
Visit Discover Postgraduate study to book your place.
Other ways to visit Sussex
We run weekly guided campus tours every Wednesday afternoon, year round. Book a place online at Visit us and Open Days.
You are also welcome to visit the University independently without any pre-arrangement.
