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

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Global Studies is a unique interdisciplinary school, where you will benefit from:
- cutting-edge research on development, and high-profile research centres linking development to other global issues such as migration, human rights and security
- international faculty with expertise in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, with a critical and engaged approach to development, combining academic analysis and policy expertise
- a distinctive programme of guest lectures, research seminars and other events, covering a range of global political and development-related issues
- access to research placements with partner organisations around the world and our worldwide alumni base.
Programme outline
You will be based in the School of Global Studies.
This MA provides you with an intellectual understanding of the major issues in social development and an introduction to the knowledge and skills necessary for social development practitioners. Taught by active practitioners in the field of social development, the course provides opportunities for those already involved in social development to reflect on their activities in this field, while enabling those who have no experience of social development to gain the appropriate skills and knowledge. It is taught through a combination of lectures, seminars and workshops, and emphasis is placed not only on developing your academic and analytical skills but also on improving your presentation skills.
Assessment
Most modules are examined through 3,000- 5,000-word term papers. You also write a 10,000-word dissertation.
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.
This MA is built around a number of core modules and options. However, it is also possible for you to choose an option from other MA degrees in the School of Global Studies, subject to the fulfilment of any prerequisites and the availability of places. Note that not all options run in any one year.
Autumn term: Concepts of Social Development • Theories of Development and Underdevelopment.
Spring term: you choose two from Activism for Development and Social Justice • Anthropology of Childhood • Anthropology of Reconciliation and Reconstruction • Critical Debates in Environment and Development • Cultural Understandings of Health and Healing • Embodiment and Institutionalisation of Violence, Conflict and Conciliation • Environmental Policy and Industrial Technology • Fair Trade, Ethical Business and New Moral Economies • Globalisation and Rural Change • International Relations of Global Environment Change • Knowledge, Power and Resistance • Migration, Inequality and Social Change • Poverty, Marginality and Everyday Lives • Refugees and Development • The Architecture of Aid • Transnational Migration and Diaspora.
You also take a Research Methods and Professional Skills module, which provides training to prepare you for further research and a professional career. This module is delivered as a series of workshops including one that prepares you for your dissertation.
We will help you find a 12-week study placement for the summer term and vacation.
Summer term: you work on your dissertation, or on a dissertation with placement.
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
- Concepts of Social Development
- Research Methods and Professional Skills (Int Dev)
- Theories of Development and Underdevelopment
Options
- Activism for Development and Social Justice
- Anthropology of Childhood
- Anthropology of Reconciliation and Reconstruction
- Critical Debates in Environment and Development
- Embodiment and institutionalisation of violence, conflict & conciliation
- Fair Trade, Ethical Business & New Moral Economies
- Globalisation and Rural Change
- Human Rights in International Relations
- Medical Anthropology: Cultural Understandings of Health and Healing
- Poverty, Marginality and Everyday Lives
- Refugees and development
- The Architecture of Aid
- The Political Economy of Development
- Transnational migration and diaspora
- Women and Human Rights
Activism for Development and Social Justice
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module addresses the ways in which activists and activism have sought to engage in development and social justice. You will explore and evaluate different approaches to activism, grounding this in theories of social mobilization and citizenship, and will work through a series of practical examples to explore how activism has been used to address issues of development and social justice. In doing so you'll develop your knowledge of theories of social change and approaches to development and social justice, exploring how different kinds of activisms seek to bring about change.
The module explores the contributions that imaginative, insurgent, disruptive and chaotic forms of social action have to make to development, and covers a range of forms of collective action from the use of petitions and lobbying of representatives, to the use of the arts in "interrupting" everyday life to bring some of its elements into question, to mobilisation for protests and peaceful demonstrations, to non-violent direct action and info-activism.
Anthropology of Reconciliation and Reconstruction
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
In their ethnographies, anthropologies have studied 'intra-cultural' conflict resolution practices. As activists, they have contributed to the emergence of generic approaches to conflict resolution. They have, however, raised important questions regarding the acontextuality of generic practices and whether they can capture the complexity of local circumstances. The first part of the module will critically assess the relationship between local ('intra-cultural') and generic approaches to conflict resolution (as practiced by INGOs and other third-parties), asking whether the latter can be tempered with a sense of context-specificity. The module will also consider the sociology of mediation and peace negotiations and the power relations and dynamics involved.
The second part of the module will be concerned with the desire to 'reconstruct' society in the aftermath of violent conflict. 'truth acknowledging' exercises (such as Truth Commissions), issues of memory and ways in which a psychologised 'nation' can be 'healed' will be critically assessed. This will be contrasted with arguments in favour of 'retributive' exercises (such as international criminal tribunals and domestic trials).
We will study the following: introduction to module; conflict resolution in context; conflict resolution or conflict transformation? 'Culture' and mediation/negotiation; INGOs and conflict resolution; peace processes; memory and narrative; 'truth commissions'; international criminal tribunals; one-to-one term paper tutorials.
Anthropology of Childhood
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Anthropologists have taken children's lives into account from the early stages of the discipline, as visible in the works of, for example, Mead and Malinowski. These accounts, however, were often based on adult's views on children. More recently, anthropological interest has shifted from these socially constructed and symbolic understandings of childhood to an engagement with children's own perspectives and practices (James and Prout 1990). These approaches assume the centrality of children as actors, rather than passive beings who are being acted on; children are seen as complete humans, rather than as deficient adults-to-be. This perspective has enabled a wealth of cross-cultural, ethnographic studies to emerge, describing ideas and practices surrounding children and childhood. These include key events of the lifecourse, such as birth and death, but also a focus on how children are shaped by, and actively shape, their social environments, such as families and peers, educational institutions and religious communities.
Key themes address children in the context of play and labour, childrens' bodies, spaces and mobilities, as well as their experiences of, and responses to violence. This module aims to give an overview of anthropological engagements with childhood, both historically and including its more recent methodological innovations. Broader theoretical discussions are complemented by in-depth ethnographic material from cultures and societies across the globe.
Overview:
Week 1 'Childhood' as a cross-cultural concept
Week 2 Anthropological Perspectives on Children
Week 3 Rites of Passage
Week 4 Education and Morality
Week 5 Childrens' Bodies and Spaces
Week 7 Labour and Play
Week 6 Childrens' Mobilities
Week 9 Children and Violence
Week 10 Individual Term Paper Tutorials.
Concepts of Social Development
30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1
Critical Debates in Environment and Development
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Medical Anthropology: Cultural Understandings of Health and Healing
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Medical knowledge, related practices and health-seeking are shaped by the social, political and cultural contexts in which they occur. This module draws upon theories, concepts, and approaches in medical anthropology to interrogate the concept of 'health' in its diverse formulations. The module considers how people integrate different types of medicine in their everyday lives. It examines 'health-seeking' in different medical traditions. 'The body' is used as an alternative framework for understanding medical pluralism, and the connections between experience, efficacy, and knowledge.
Embodiment and institutionalisation of violence, conflict & conciliation
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
In this module we explore links between violence and conflict in society and its inscription into the body, memory, and habit. We consider the establishment of such connections within social institutional orders, and within disorder, questioning the salience of such distinctions. Therefore, module readings will, in Nancy Scheper-Hughes' words, 'continually juxtapose the routine, the ordinary the symbolic and normative violence of everyday life ("terror as usual") against sudden eruptions of unexpected, extraordinary or "gratuitous" violence (as in genocide, state terror, dirty wars and civil wars).' We explore the dialectic between body and society, as mediated through violence but also pleasure: efforts by society and state to appropriate bodies such as through initiation ritual, military drilling, and everyday rituals of social ordering, the responses of embodied subjects ranging from 'thralldom' and accommodation to resistance, and issues they raise around gender, personhood, and agency. We examine the inscription of nation, race, ethnicity, class and gender into bodies and embodied practices. Finally, we reflect on a range of discussions and debates concerning the relations between body, language, violence, pain, and fear.
Fair Trade, Ethical Business & New Moral Economies
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Where and under what conditions are our T-shirts produced? How does Fair Trade impact on the livelihoods of small farmers in the Global South? Is Corporate Social Responsibility just a marketing ploy? Has ethics become only a matter of personal consumption behaviour?
This module familiarises you with discourses and practices around ethics and engagement in the global economy. It covers some of the ways in which ethics in markets, trade and global production networks are phrased and expressed in the contemporary world, and explores what sorts of mobilisations have emerged in the light of new ethical concerns. You will explore the ways in which ethical issues within the sphere of the economy have long been articulated in terms of moral economy, philanthropic giving, and relationships of patronage and dependency. The module goes on to discusses the contemporary shift towards global trade and production networks, and the ways in which this shift has produced new ethical concerns around economic behaviour.
These concerns are increasingly (and differentially) expressed in terms of CSR, fair trade and ethical consumption. They also give rise to a series of engagements in terms of CSR interventions, ethical trade initiatives, civil society activism and critical consumption practices. You will assesses each of these initiatives from both a theoretical and an ethnographic perspective. You will also critically consider the implications of such engagements in terms of power, equality and gender, and the ways in which they emerge from and reproduce complex global interdependencies.
Globalisation and Rural Change
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
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.
Poverty, Marginality and Everyday Lives
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module examines the processes of impoverishment and marginalisation of children, youth and adults in development contexts. A principle focus in on what anthropology can tell us about processes of impoverishment and marginality in development contexts – a complex and highly contextual field. By considering detailed ethnographic accounts of peoples’ everyday lives, you will also interrogate how local preferences, priorities and values can be incorporated into development policy. Throughout the module you will explore these topics with reference to the development policies and practices that have been aimed at `the poor’, as well as the wider political economies of economic transformation in the contemporary world. Focussing upon local contexts, a central premise is that people’s everyday experiences of poverty and marginality have to be situated historically, as well as in terms of the micro-dynamics of economic, social and political relations.
Refugees and development
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Research Methods and Professional Skills (Int Dev)
15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
The Architecture of Aid
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This course explores the structure and organisation of the aid industry. You will cover the colonial heritage of the aid industry; the Washington and Post-Washington consensuses and the nature of structural adjustment; the rise of the NGO sector; the nature of the project and post-project approaches to development; and relations between disaster relief and development.
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.
Theories of Development and Underdevelopment
30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1
On this course you will examine the theories associated with modernisation, dependency, participatory approaches, post-modernism and all-encompassing trope 'globalisation'. You will explore how our thinking about development has changed over time and why it has changed. While theoretical in orientation, you will consider through seminar discussions that the division between 'theory' and 'practice' is to some extent misleading.
Transnational migration and diaspora
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
Women and Human Rights
30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1
This module is divided into two halves. The first half consists of core topics providing a theoretical framework for the study of women's human rights. You will draw on feminist legal theory, human rights theory, anthropological and historical materials and international and national rights instruments and documentation. The second half focuses on the conception, implementation, adherence and breach of a specific right or related rights.
Entry requirements
UK entrance requirements
A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in the social or natural sciences. Applicants with other degrees or relevant practical work experience will also be considered.
Overseas entrance requirements
- Overseas qualifications
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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.
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
Related programmes
- Anthropology of Development and Social Transformation MA
- Climate Change and Development MSc
- Conflict, Security and Development MA
- Corruption and Governance MA
- Development Economics MSc
- Human Rights MA
- Innovation and Sustainability for International Development MSc
- International Education and Development MA
- Migration Studies MA
Fees and funding
Fees
Home UK/EU students: £5,5001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £5,5002
Overseas students: £13,0003
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The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
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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
Within the School of Global Studies there is a close academic collaboration between departments and interdisciplinary research centres. Both faculty and students are members of the Centre for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, the Centre for World Environmental History, the Justice and Violence Research Centre, and the Sussex Centre for Migration Research.
Research interests are briefly described below. For more detailed information, visit International development.
Dr Andreas Antoniades Globalisation, political economy.
Dr Paul Boyce Gender, sexualities, health, South Asia.
Dr Grace Carswell East Africa, Southern India; rural livelihoods; population-environment interactions.
Professor Andrea Cornwall Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Brazil, India, UK: political anthropology, gender.
Dr Vinita Damodaran Protest and nationalism in India.
Dr Geert De Neve Politics of labour in India, anthropology of globalisation.
Professor Saul Dubow Racial segregation and apartheid, ethnicity and national identity, the nature of imperialism and of colonial science.
Professor Mick Dunford China, regional and urban economic development.
Dr Nigel Eltringham Rwanda, anthropology of rights and reconciliation.
Professor James Fairhead West and central Africa; environmental anthropology; conflict, violence, health.
Dr Anne-Meike Fechter Ethnographies of aid workers, gender, South-East Asia.
Professor Katy Gardner Mining, livelihoods and social development in Bangladesh; transnational migration and development.
Dr Elizabeth Harrison Partnership and participation, development discourses, UK and sub-Saharan Africa.
Dr Pamela Kea Gender relations, agrarian change and development.
Dr Evan Killick Poverty, development and social relations in Amazonia.
Professor Dominic Kniveton Climate systems and the hydrological cycle in southern Africa, migration.
Dr Mark Leopold Conflict and political violence in Uganda.
Professor Alan Lester Colonial origins of humanitarianism, imperial networks in Africa and Australia.
Dr Julie Litchfield Poverty and development.
Dr Peter Luetchford Central America, fair trade and development.
Dr Kamran Matin Processes of modern socio-political transformation in the Middle East.
Dr Lyndsay McLean Hilker Conflict and violence, reconciliation, ethnicity, Rwanda.
Professor Peter Newell Environment, development and climate change.
Dr David Ockwell Low-carbon technology transfer to developing countries, energy policy, communication and behaviour change.
Dr Filippo Osella Social relations, migration, masculinity in South India.
Dr Fabio Petito International political theory, international relations of the Mediterranean.
Dr Rebecca Prentice Health, gender and the politics of labour.
Dr Dinah Rajak Corporate social responsibility and development.
Dr David Robinson Impacts of development; environmental change; soils, coasts.
Professor Ben Rogaly Political economy of migrant work in India.
Dr Pedram Rowhani Climate change and food, GIS, East Africa.
Dr Jan Selby Peace processes and water politics in the Middle East.
Dr Ben Selwyn Export production and development in Brazil.
Professor Ronald Skeldon Professorial Fellow. Population migration in the developing world, especially Asia.
Dr Anna Stavrianakis Global arms trade, civil society, imperialism.
Dr Maya Unnithan India, reproductive rights and development.
Careers and profiles
Our graduates go on to work in development agencies within and beyond government, as well as in NGOs and community organisations. Recent graduates include a programme officer for the UNHCR, a consultant for the Colombian government and a country director for Shelter for Life International (Uganda).
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.
School of Global Studies,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877686
E devstudiespg@sussex.ac.uk
International development
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.
