BA, 3 years, UCAS: LLC2
Typical A level offer: AAB
Subject overview
Why economics?
Addressing many of the world’s problems and issues requires an understanding of economics. Why are some countries so rich and others so poor? Should Microsoft be broken up? Should the private sector be involved in providing health and education? Could environmental taxes help reduce global warming? What is the future of the euro?
Economics provides a framework for thinking about such issues in depth, allowing you to get to the heart of complex, topical problems. The methods of economics can be applied to a wide range of questions and will prove useful to you in your future career. In addition, the study of economics teaches you a variety of practical skills, including the ability to use and evaluate evidence (often statistical) in order to arrive at sound conclusions.
Why economics at Sussex?
In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 100 per cent of our economics research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and 60 per cent rated as internationally excellent or higher.
We emphasise the practical application of economics to the analysis of contemporary social and economic problems.
We have strong links to the major national and international economic institutions such as the European Commission, the World Bank and the Department for International Development.
The Department has strong research clusters in labour markets and in development economics, and is one of Europe’s leading centres for research on issues of international trade.
We offer you the chance to conduct an economics research project supervised by a faculty member.
Why international relations?
In today’s increasingly interdependent and turbulent world, many of the leading issues in the news concern international affairs. Whether it is the continuing impact of globalisation, the military conflicts in the Gulf or Afghanistan, the inequalities of wealth and power between north and south, or the activities of international organisations such as the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund or the United Nations, the subject of international relations is now directly involved in people’s daily lives.
However, a degree in international relations takes you far beyond the headlines, enabling you to reflect in a systematic and informed way on the deeper issues behind the news. In particular it:
- introduces you to the social, economic and political history of the international system as it has emerged and developed over the last 200 years
- enables you to explore the ideas of key classical and modern thinkers who have analysed world politics and have argued over its rights and wrongs
- gives you the opportunity to develop focused knowledge and understanding in specialised areas of your choice such as international law, global environmental change, international organisation, security studies and so on.
Why international relations at Sussex?
Teaching by leading scholars: international relations at Sussex is ranked 7th in the UK for the quality of its research and publications in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE).
By encouraging intellectual curiosity and cultural agility, the School of Global Studies, in which you will be based, enhances your employability (British Council and Think Global: Survey of Senior Business Leaders, 2011).
We are proud to be one of the longest-established international relations departments in the UK.
We offer thriving undergraduate courses with over 100 new students a year.
We have a global outlook – a truly international student body and faculty.
We offer a welcoming teaching environment and encourage active learning and critical approaches.
Our degree courses combine traditional perspectives with the latest ideas.
In your second year of study, there are opportunities for you to spend a term at a partner university abroad, or on a work placement..
Flexibility and choice: international relations can be combined with various subjects in a joint degree.
Programme content
The connection between these disciplines is currently best illustrated by the issue of globalisation. Much can be said about this topic from the point of view of international trade theory, which has a long history in economics and is still developing. However, some of the conclusions are challenged by those working in international relations, who focus more on the unequal bargaining powers of developed and developing countries, for example. By taking this degree, you see how each discipline challenges the other and hence gain a deeper appreciation of the respective strengths and weaknesses.
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.
How will I learn?
The core ideas and analytical techniques are presented in lectures and supplemented by classes or workshops where you can test your understanding and explore the issues in more depth. These provide the opportunity for student interaction, an essential part of the learning process at Sussex. The more quantitative skills, such as using statistical software, are taught in computer workshops. On the dissertation module in the final year, you receive one-to-one supervision as you investigate your chosen research topic in depth.
Formal assessment is by a range of methods including unseen exams and coursework. In addition there are regular assignments, which allow you to monitor your progress. In the first year, you have regular meetings with your academic advisor to discuss your academic progress and to receive feedback on your assignments.
At Sussex, the scheduled contact time you receive is made up of lectures, seminars, tutorials, classes, laboratory and practical work, and group work; the exact mix depends on the subject you are studying. This scheduled contact time is reflected in the Key Information Set (KIS) for this course. In addition to this, you will have further contact time with teaching staff on an individual basis to help you develop your learning and skills, and to provide academic guidance and advice to support your independent study.
For more information on what it's like to study at Sussex, refer to Study support.
What will I achieve?
- a detailed knowledge and understanding of the principles of economics
- the skills to abstract the essential features of a problem and use the framework of economics to analyse it
- the ability to evaluate and conduct your own empirical research
- the confidence to communicate economic ideas and concepts to a wider audience
- a range of transferable skills, applicable to a wide variety of occupations.
Core content
Year 1
You are introduced to the principles of economics and their application to a range of practical and topical issues. The aim is not to look at economic theory in isolation but to learn how it is used to analyse real issues. You also take a mathematics module, giving you some of the tools you need to understand contemporary economics.
Year 2
You develop your understanding of economics principles through the study of more advanced topics such as trade and risk. You also take a statistics module and learn how to analyse and interpret data. In addition, there are more applied modules, allowing you to see how the subject deals with empirical issues. There are opportunities for small research projects, including a group project.
Year 3
You have the opportunity to choose from a range of options such as labour or development economics. These modules go into the relevant issues in greater depth, giving you a high level of expertise. There is the opportunity to do a sustained piece of research on a chosen topic. You can also take more advanced quantitative modules – useful if you wish to do postgraduate work.
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.
How will I learn?
Teaching methods change as you become an increasingly independent, self-directed learner. Core modules in the first and second years are taught by weekly lectures and group discussions, while final-year modules are based entirely on seminar teaching. Similarly, the pattern of assessment is designed to promote different kinds of intellectual and practical skills at each stage, reflecting your developing academic independence.
At Sussex, the scheduled contact time you receive is made up of lectures, seminars, tutorials, classes, laboratory and practical work, and group work; the exact mix depends on the subject you are studying. This scheduled contact time is reflected in the Key Information Set (KIS) for this course. In addition to this, you will have further contact time with teaching staff on an individual basis to help you develop your learning and skills, and to provide academic guidance and advice to support your independent study.
For more information on what it's like to study at Sussex, refer to Study support.
What will I achieve?
- a rigorous grounding in the subject including understanding of the core concepts and questions that define international relations
- familiarity with the key theoretical traditions of international relations, and a history of the modern discipline
- awareness of the many practical, political and moral challenges facing contemporary global society, and a range of intellectual approaches to address these challenges
- a range of intellectual skills: for example, the retrieval and use of primary and secondary information sources, and the presentation of concise, critical and cogently structured arguments, both orally and in writing
- practical skills, such as the ability to work both independently and in co-operation with others, to deploy a range of communication and information technology skills, and to reflect upon and take responsibility for your own learning, making use of constructive feedback.
Core content
Year 1
You acquire an appreciation of the importance of international relations in the contemporary world. You are introduced to the major areas of the discipline: different approaches to the study of international relations • the major events of modern international history • the role and purpose of theory and its relevance to major issues in international relations.
Year 2
You have the opportunity to study both classical and contemporary theory and learn how to use the concepts, approaches and methods of the discipline to develop an understanding of the contested nature of international relations and the global political economy. You will develop your own critical capacities to analyse ideas and concepts, as well as the decisions that surround international relations.
Year 3
You build on your knowledge of the discipline gained in Years 1 and 2 and undertake intensive studies of a specialised field of international relations. Options include, among others, in-depth studies of a specific region of the world, and themes within the fields of international relations theory, international security, and global political economy.
Please note that these are the modules running in 2012.
Year 1
Core modules
Year 2
Core modules
- Advanced Macroeconomics
- Advanced Microeconomics
- Contemporary International Theory
- Introduction to International Political Economy
- Macroeconomics 2
- Microeconomics 2
Options
Year 3
Core modules
Options
- Behavioural Economics
- Capitalism and Geopolitics
- Capitalism and Geopolitics: in-depth Analysis
- Climate Change Economics
- Conflict and Military Intervention: in-depth Analysis
- Contemporary Issues in the Global Political Economy
- Contemporary Issues in the Global Political Economy: in-depth Analysis
- Corporate Finance
- Development and Geopolitics in East Asia: in-depth Analysis
- Econometrics
- Economics of European Integration
- Environment and Development in World Politics
- Environment and Development in World Politics: in-depth Analysis
- Environmental Economics
- Ethics in Global Politics
- Finance and Power
- Finance and Power: in-depth Analysis
- Global Resistance: Subjects and Practices: in-depth Analysis
- International Trade
- Labour Economics
- Law in International Relations: in-depth Analysis
- Life, Power and Resistance: Critical Perspectives on the Post-Westphalian Era
- Marxism and International Relations
- Marxism and International Relations: in-depth Analysis
- Mercenaries, Gangs and Terrorists: Private Security in International Politics
- Monetary Theory and Policy
- Political Economy of the Environment: in-depth Analysis
- Religions in Global Politics
- Religions in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
- Russia and the Former Soviet Union in Global Politics
- Russia and the Former Soviet Union in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
- Sex and Death in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
- The Arms Trade in International Politics
- The Economics of Development
- The Political Economy of Latin American Development: in-depth Analysis
- The Politics of International Trade: in-depth Analysis
- The Politics of Terror
- The Politics of Terror
- The Reign of Rights in Global Politics
- The Reign of Rights in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
- The United States in the World
- The United States in the World: in-depth Analysis
- Understanding Global Markets
- What is War
- What is War: in-depth Analysis
Classical Political Theory & International Relations
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module will introduce you to the primary texts of authors such as Hobbes, Kant, Machiavelli, Marx, Mill, Thucydides, Vitoria and others who are commonly cited as precursors of contemporary international thought. It asks what relevance these authors have had for the establishment of International Relations as a discipline, and how far they can be used to analyse contemporary international politics. Finally, the module demonstrates how classical authors can also be read to provide a radical critique of contemporary international thought and practice.
Introduction to Economics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This course provides an introduction to the fundamental principles of economics. The first half of the course deals with microeconomic issues including the behaviour of individuals and firms, their interaction in markets and the role of government. The second half of the course is devoted to macroeconomics and examines the determinants of aggregate economic variables, such as national income, inflation, and the balance of payments, and the relationships between them. This course also provides students with a basic introduction to mathematical economics, covering solving linear equations, differential calculus, and discounting.
Introduction to International Relations
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This module introduces you to the academic study of international relations. The module outlines the specific characteristics of International Relations (IR) as a distinct scholarly discipline, separate from other disciplines such as politics or sociology. The module considers what has defined IR as a discipline and what constitutes its core conceptual and methodological coordinates at the present time. The module approaches these questions through a consideration of the historical development of IR through a series of conceptual and methodological debates. Classically these debates are conceived of as tracing a path from idealism via realism to a pluralist methodological position. Understanding these debates, the circumstances that have given rise to them, and the methods they have generated will give you a good orientation in the disciplinary terrain of IR that will help them in contextualising the ideas they will encounter in the international theory courses in Years 1 and 2.
Introduction to Mathematics for Finance and Economics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This module introduces you to the basic mathematical methods and techniques used in economic analysis, and will enable you to use these skills independently and with confident. These skills also have a transferable content and are useful in other disciplines and applications.
Macroeconomics 1
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module introduces core short-run and medium-run macroeconomics. First we study what determines demand for goods and services in the short run. We introduce financial markets and outline the links between financial markets and demand for goods. The Keynesian IS-LM model encapsulates these linkages.
Second, we switch to the medium-term supply-side. We bring together the market for labour to the price-setting decisions of firms in order to build an understanding of how inflation and unemployment are determined. Last, the supply side and the IS-LM model are combined to produce a full medium-term macroeconomic model.
Microeconomics 1
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module develops consumer and producer theory, examining such topics as consumer surplus, labour supply, production and costs of the firm, alternative market structures and factor markets. It explores the application of these concepts to public policy, making use of real-world examples to illustrate the usefulness of the theory.
The Rise of the Modern International Order
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
Today we take it for granted that the peoples and governments of the world are linked in a single international system. Yet it was only during 'the long 19th century' that, for the first time in history, a truly 'world' politics began to emerge. This module examines how this came about by reviewing some major events and process of international history in the period from 1789 to 1914.
It begins with the international impact of the French revolution and the industrial revolution, and moves on to the formation of nation-states in Europe and outside. It analyses the role played by Great Britain in organising the Victorian international system, as well as the occupation of the non-European world by European imperialism. Finally, the module reflects upon the combination of factors that caused this 'long 19th century' to end in the carnage of the Great War. At the same time, by looking at some of the major controversies that historians have had about how to understand these events, the module also raises key questions about the nature of historical knowledge itself.
The Short Twentieth Century and Beyond
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
Few periods in history have been more tumultuous than the 20th century, racked almost from start to finish by wars, revolutions and global ideological conflicts. In the same period, however, the international system also developed new mechanisms of stability and international organisation - the League of Nations and the United Nations, the 'Bretton Woods' institutions and, increasingly, European integration. This module reviews some major international events and processes of 'the short 20th century' (1914-1989), focusing on this theme of order and disorder in international history.
Advanced Macroeconomics
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The module completes the macroeconomics sequence, starting with a consideration of the policy implications of rational expectations. The macroeconomy is then opened up to international trade and capital movements: the operation of monetary and fiscal policies and the international transmission of disturbances under fixed and flexible exchange rates are contrasted, and the issues bearing on the choice of exchange-rate regime are explored. The major macroeconomic problems of hyperinflation, persistent unemployment and exchange-rate crises are examined. The module concludes by drawing together the implications of the analysis for the design and operation of macroeconomic policy.
Advanced Microeconomics
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module covers the topics of general equilibrium and welfare economics, including the important issue of market failure. General equilibrium is illustrated using Sen's entitlement approach to famines and also international trade. Welfare economics covers concepts of efficiency and their relationship to the market mechanism. Market failure includes issues such as adverse selection and moral hazard, and applications are drawn from health insurance, environmental economics and the second-hand car market.
Contemporary International Theory
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module examines the role this tradition plays in the development of contemporary international theory (post-1945) and the establishment of orthodoxy. Major approaches and debates in the discipline will be examined and evaluated, and placed in the more general context of what is problematic about developing cumulative knowledge of social relations. Varieties of realism, liberalism and the English school approach will be considered as well as more recent critical engagements coming from Marxism, feminism, constructivism, postmodernism and globalism.
Introduction to International Political Economy
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
The intensity and scope of the relationship between politics and economics has become a central element of international relations. This module offers a distinctive perspective in terms of which traditional issues of international relations - such as war, trade, integration and international society - can be studied. It considers the central theoretical traditions of international political economy: liberalism, realism, Marxism, neo-institutionalism, and critical theory. It then applies these diverse theoretical traditions in an analysis of the evolution of the state system from the 16th to the 20th century, paying particular attention to the relationship between class and state power, on the one hand, and the capitalist world economy, on the other.
Macroeconomics 2
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module is concerned with two main topics. 'The long run' is an introduction to how economies grow, gradually raising the standard of living, decade by decade. Once we have the basic analysis in place, we can begin to explain why there are such huge disparities in living standards around the world. 'Expectations' is a deepening of the behavioural background to modelling, saving and investment decisions, emphasising the intrinsically forward-looking nature of saving and investment decisions and analysing the financial markets which coordinate these decisions.
Microeconomics 2
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module develops the economics principles learned in Microeconomics 1. Alternative market structures such as oligopoly and monopolistic competition are studied and comparisons drawn with perfect competition and monopoly. Decision-making under uncertainty and over multiple time periods is introduced, relaxing some of the restrictive assumptions made in the level 1 module. The knowledge gained is applied to such issues as investment in human capital (eg education), saving and investment decisions, insurance and criminal deterrence.
Development and the State
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module is concerned with the role of the state in development. It considers this subject matter theoretically - that is, by exploring debates in state theory, and on the relationship between the state and development - empirically, by investigating a range of historical and contemporary state forms and the impacts of these state forms on processes of development, and normatively, by posing questions about what the nature and role of the state should ideally be.
The module examines the main theoretical approaches to the state and historical state forms and their attendant development experiences, in the north and in the post-colonial south. Finally, the module moves to development since the 1980s, exploring the impacts of state failure, neo-liberalism, democratisation and global governance on state forms and patterns of development.
Globalisation and Global Governance
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module complements International Political Economy I by applying a holistic, political and economic approach to an analysis of the changing character of the contemporary world. It examines the emergence and subsequent decline of the multilateral system and the rise of globalisation, especially the nature of global institutions such as the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund and the G8 meetings.
You will also cover the rise of a global offshore financial system and delve deeper into the changing nature of state, firm and society in the age of globalisation. The module examines the changing character of the development project, from decolonialisation and the decline of the formal empires to the emergence of the third world and the contemporary debates concerning the nature of development, economic growth, human welfare and the environment.
Security and Insecurity in Global Politics
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Security is central to the issue agenda of international relations. Traditionally security has been understood to comprise the question of the protection of sovereign territory through armed force. Security has thus examined issues such as arms races, war, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Traditionally these issues were addressed through a realist lens that regarded the state and its survival as the central conceptual maxims. However, contemporary scholarship concerning security has broadened this agenda considerably. New sources of insecurity have emerged outside the traditional state form, as can be seen in the rise of issues such as terrorism as well as wider 'complex emergencies' on the international security agenda. Moreover, the conceptual lenses for examining these questions of (in)security have also multiplied, giving rise to new referent objects of security and a wider security agenda encompassing issues such as identity, genocide, and the environment. This module introduces you to the broad issue agenda that shapes the contemporary study of (in)security. Each week it will focus on a different issue that defines the agenda of international security.
The Politics of Foreign Policy
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Statistics for Economics and Finance
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module introduces the statistical techniques used in economics, and involves computer-based applications. Topics covered include: summarising and plotting data, basic probability theory, hypothesis testing, correlation analysis, and bivariate
and multiple regression analysis. You will be introduced in greater detail to the EXCEL
spreadsheet package, which you will use for your assessed coursework.
Statistics Project
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module provides an opportunity for you to make use of the statistical techniques you may have learnt on the Statistics for Economists module. You will be required to submit a project based on your own research, having gathered your own data (either from primary or secondary sources). You will be able to choose a topic of interest to yourselves and will receive supervision during the course of the term.
Behavioural Economics
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
During this module you will examine the psychological underpinnings of economic behaviour and examine recent theories and empirical results in behavioural economics. This forms the starting point in core economics modules and the dominant model of choice in economics, in which agents maximize expected utility given the information they possess and the choice set they have.
A growing body of empirical evidence has sought to challenge the assumption of individuals as rational economic agents; you will analyse this recent empirical evidence across a range of fields of economics and examine the new theories of economic behaviour.
Capitalism and Geopolitics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This multi-disciplinary module is designed to examine the relations between capitalism and geopolitics and how their interaction has shaped different political communities and world orders from the 17th century up to the 21st century. It explores the major theoretical traditions and debates, old and new, on the nexus between capitalism and geopolitics and combines these theoretical perspectives with in-depth interrogations of the historical material the key events, processes, actors that shaped this turbulent international history of war and peace, crises and revolutions, conquest and exploitation.
You critically re-examine the origins and co-development of the terms capitalism and geopolitics as real historical phenomena and associated discourses,
You examine their interrelation across various historical periods and diverse theoretical registers.
The first part of the module starts with an overview of the three classical traditions that have most centrally informed this discourse: the writings of Max Weber and Otto Hintze that assert the primacy of military competition for geopolitical orders and that have - since the mid-1980s inspired a Neo-Weberian turn in Historical Sociology and IR; the works of Fernand Braudel and Immanuel Wallerstein updated and extended by neo-Gramscian IR Theory - that stress the rise of commercial exchange and the construction of successive world hegemonies; and the ideas of Karl Marx that, although short on specific arguments on geopolitics, have more recently led to intense debates within the Neo-Marxist literature on how to conceptualise capitalist social relations and class conflict in their effects on inter-state conflict and co-operation across the centuries.
Against this theoretical setting, the second part of the module examines sequentially a number of different historical geopolitical orders dynastic-absolutist, 19th century British hegemony, imperialist, fascist, liberal and contemporary and the transitions between them on the basis of divergent and contested interpretations deriving from the three classical traditions. The aim is to provide a set of theoretically-informed and empirically-controlled analyses of the ways in which capitalism and geopolitics have shaped each other and constituted varieties of territorial orders in historical perspective.
Capitalism and Geopolitics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This multi-disciplinary module is designed to examine the relations between capitalism and geopolitics and how their interaction has shaped different political communities and world orders from the 17th century up to the 21st century. It explores the major theoretical traditions and debates, old and new, on the nexus between capitalism and geopolitics and combines these theoretical perspectives with in-depth interrogations of the historical material the key events, processes, actors that shaped this turbulent international history of war and peace, crises and revolutions, conquest and exploitation.
You critically re-examine the origins and co-development of the terms capitalism and geopolitics as real historical phenomena and associated discourses,
You examine their interrelation across various historical periods and diverse theoretical registers.
The first part of the module starts with an overview of the three classical traditions that have most centrally informed this discourse: the writings of Max Weber and Otto Hintze that assert the primacy of military competition for geopolitical orders and that have - since the mid-1980s inspired a Neo-Weberian turn in Historical Sociology and IR; the works of Fernand Braudel and Immanuel Wallerstein updated and extended by neo-Gramscian IR Theory - that stress the rise of commercial exchange and the construction of successive world hegemonies; and the ideas of Karl Marx that, although short on specific arguments on geopolitics, have more recently led to intense debates within the Neo-Marxist literature on how to conceptualise capitalist social relations and class conflict in their effects on inter-state conflict and co-operation across the centuries.
Against this theoretical setting, the second part of the module examines sequentially a number of different historical geopolitical orders dynastic-absolutist, 19th century British hegemony, imperialist, fascist, liberal and contemporary and the transitions between them on the basis of divergent and contested interpretations deriving from the three classical traditions. The aim is to provide a set of theoretically-informed and empirically-controlled analyses of the ways in which capitalism and geopolitics have shaped each other and constituted varieties of territorial orders in historical perspective.
Climate Change Economics
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module will deal with the economics of anthropogenic climate change, which apart from being the international policy issue of the present time will be a vehicle for the illustration of a wide range of ideas and techniques from economic analysis.
Conflict and Military Intervention: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This seminar analyses what might loosely be called the "new security environment" and its impacts on international relations. During the term, we will undertake a theoretical and, more crucially, policy relevant analysis of the security threats that have led to a growing incidence of inter-state and intra-state conflict in spite of the hopes engendered by a post-Cold War 'New World (Dis)Order'. We will examine for the most part the causal factors, dynamics and domestic as well as international efforts at managing and resolving through political, diplomatic and military efforts intra-state conflicts. Beyond examining the relevant theoretical concepts and viewpoints, we will also explore their propositions within the framework of case studies from a variety of conflict areas. The main focus will be on the relationship between international politics and the employment of soft and hard power in order to resolve such security threats. Particular emphasis will be given to the problems and challenges stemming from the growing trend of humanitarian/military intervention in international politics. Furthermore, the conduct of the 'Global War on Terror' and its implications for international security will be examined in detail.
You are required to be conversant with major international relations theories and have a good grasp of contemporary international history and events in order to make the most of this dissertation option. These two areas will enable you to then explore in detail the theories that specifically relate to conflict and the case studies that relate to the contemporary post-9/11 security trends, many of which had been in fact developing since the end of the Cold War.
The main emphasis of this module is to explain and understand conflict and its resolution from an empirical, pragmatic and policy-oriented (rather that reflectivist and philosophical) perspective. Intensive study will be required as many of the empirical and theoretical approaches that will be explored will be new to most students in any case.
Contemporary Issues in the Global Political Economy
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The central theme running through this module is how the architecture of existing capitalism has to be adjusted or brought into balance with the needs of expanding markets. We begin by looking at attempts by global governance institutions like the WTO (World Trade Organisation) to create a largely deregulated world market. We then examine how financial systems are expanding and how the stock market has become a key institution of modern capitalism. We discuss then the changing nature of multinational corporations and the state as they reorient themselves towards a global market. We examine empirically the post-Cold War expansion of capitalism into Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East. Finally, we analyse the most recent developments in world affairs from a political economy perspective, looking at the increasing military bias of foreign policy of major capitalist states, as well as at the changing nature of anti-capitalist protest in the wake of 9/11.
Contemporary Issues in the Global Political Economy: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The central theme running through this module is how the architecture of existing capitalism has to be adjusted or brought into balance with the needs of expanding markets. We begin by looking at attempts by global governance institutions like the WTO to create a largely deregulated world market. We then examine how financial systems are expanding and how the stock market has become a key institution of modern capitalism. We discuss then the changing nature of multinational corporations and the state as they reorient themselves towards a global market. We examine empirically the post-Cold War expansion of capitalism into Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East. Finally, we analyse the most recent developments in world affairs from a political economy perspective, looking at the increasing military bias of foreign policy of major capitalist states, as well as at the changing nature of anti-capitalist protest in the wake of 9/11.
Corporate Finance
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The aim of the module is to provide an introduction to issues in corporate finance and for you to become competent at addressing quantitative questions relating to the subject. Topics include: corporate balance sheets, portfolio analysis, risk and return, capital structure, dividend policy, options, international finance issues.
Development and Geopolitics in East Asia: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is for you to understand the rise of East Asia through examining the interconnections between regional development and geopolitical contestation in the Cold War and contemporary eras. You will adopt an historical approach, beginning with an examination of the legacies of European and Japanese imperialism in East Asia and an analysis of the establishment of post-war US hegemony in the region and its implications for subsequent economic development.
You will examine the divergent experiences of Northeast and Southeast Asia and the rise of China. We then explore the implications of the decline of Cold War geopolitical rivalry and the rise of 'globalisation' and its role in explaining subsequent trends such as the East Asian financial crisis, East Asian regionalism and the changing nature of US-China relations. Within this historical context, you will examine varying analytical frameworks and debates concerning late development, such as neoclassical versus structural institutionalism, Marxist vs. dependency theories, international/regional vs. domestic factors, etc. You will examine such theories critically, both in terms of their analytical purchase and their origins and role in geopolitical rivalry itself.
Econometrics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module studies the application of statistical methods to economic data. The focus is on regression analysis based on the ordinary least squares (OLS) principle. Topics covered include model specification and the analysis of regression disturbance problems (eg autocorrelation and heteroscedasticity).
Economics of European Integration
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is to cover economic and institutional aspects of the European integration process, focusing on the economic and also legal aspects of the European Union, internally and in its relations with partners, including prospective members. Customs union theory, the theory of monetary union, fiscal federalism and regional economics will be covered. You will be expected to understand the basic economics of integration, and also the interrelationship between economics, law and politics, as well as knowing how to track down up to date policy materials on the web.
Environment and Development in World Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The question of whether current forms of economic and political organisation in international society are capable of responding to the challenge of sustainable development is more pertinent than ever before. Questions are being asked about how development can be redefined to accommodate ecological challenges or whether we need to fundamentally rethink notions of growth and progress. This module takes a critical look at the actors and issues implicated in the emerging global debate on sustainable development. It engages with competing theoretical perspectives about the drivers of environmental change and how best to explain the nature of international cooperation on the environment and its limits, but also aims to provide you with a detailed understanding of the defining issues and tensions that constitute the struggle to define future notions of development.
The module will address empirical case studies such as climate change, biodiversity and biotechnology and deforestation as well as the relationship between trade and the environment, finance and the environment and production and the environment in a context of globalisation. You will gain an understanding of the key actors in these debates from governments and international institutions to civil society organisations and corporations and the ways their power and influence can best be understood.
The module begins with an overview of the shifting nature of the relationship between environment and development in world politics before looking at the key actors in global debates about sustainable development. From there it sets out a range of theoretical tools for understanding the global politics of these issues before focussing in on a range of issue areas, those listed above. It concludes with reflection on prospects for change and the viability of alternative proposals for better addressing the environment and development in world politics
Environment and Development in World Politics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The question of whether current forms of economic and political organisation in international society are capable of responding to the challenge of sustainable development is more pertinent than ever before. Questions are being asked about how development can be redefined to accommodate ecological challenges or whether we need to fundamentally rethink notions of growth and progress. This module takes a critical look at the actors and issues implicated in the emerging global debate on sustainable development. It engages with competing theoretical perspectives about the drivers of environmental change and how best to explain the nature of international cooperation on the environment and its limits, but also aims to provide you with a detailed understanding of the defining issues and tensions that constitute the struggle to define future notions of development.
The module will address empirical case studies such as climate change, biodiversity and biotechnology and deforestation as well as the relationship between trade and the environment, finance and the environment and production and the environment in a context of globalisation. You will gain an understanding of the key actors in these debates from governments and international institutions to civil society organisations and corporations and the ways their power and influence can best be understood.
The module begins with an overview of the shifting nature of the relationship between environment and development in world politics before looking at the key actors in global debates about sustainable development. From there it sets out a range of theoretical tools for understanding the global politics of these issues before focussing in on a range of issue areas, those listed above. It concludes with reflection on prospects for change and the viability of alternative proposals for better addressing the environment and development in world politics
Environmental Economics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Ethics in Global Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Finance and Power
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module considers the globalisation of finance and the structure of the power relations that drive it. You will examine the ways in which global finance is constructed on the basis of power struggles, and how financialisation empowers certain actors over others. The module begins by examining various forms of financial systems and their social ramifications. You will then examine how the process of globalisation affects the evolution of these financial systems and the social struggles over the direction of change. The module addresses the impacts of financialisation on the project of development, the convergence of various economic systems, and the formulation of progressive politics. Finally you will consider the regulation of finance and the various challenges it raises for political authorities and social forces.
Finance and Power: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module considers the globalisation of finance and the structure of the power relations that drive it. You will examine the ways in which global finance is constructed on the basis of power struggles, and how financialisation empowers certain actors over others. The module begins by examining various forms of financial systems and their social ramifications. You will then examine how the process of globalisation affects the evolution of these financial systems and the social struggles over the direction of change. The module addresses the impacts of financialisation on the project of development, the convergence of various economic systems, and the formulation of progressive politics. Finally you will consider the regulation of finance and the various challenges it raises for political authorities and social forces.
Global Resistance: Subjects and Practices: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
International Trade
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Labour Economics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The module explores how labour economics informs the discussion of many social issues such as the causes of unemployment; how technological change is shifting the distribution of jobs and wages; the impact of immigration on wages and employment; the impact of social security on the incentive to work; and the causes of gender and racial wage and employment gaps.
Law in International Relations: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module provides a historical overview of the political context and development of international law, an introduction to the most important theoretical issues arising out of the relationship of international politics and law, and a discussion of the relevance and meaning of recent changes in international law. Finally, it introduces you to three important areas and their respective institutions and issues: public international law, the International Court of Justice and issues of sovereignty and intervention; private international law, the World Trade Organisation, and issues of property; criminal international law, the International Criminal Court and tribunals, and issues of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Life, Power and Resistance: Critical Perspectives on the Post-Westphalian Era
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Political discourses of globalisation make implicit claims about the weakening of the state and the evolution, if not outright demise, of the 'Westphalian System'. This module interrogates claims about the arrival of a post-Westphalian era and its transformation of the realms of war, politics and ethics. It critically examines the specific legal, institutional and subjective manifestations of this post-Westphalian era in contemporary world politics, such the international Human Rights regime, the emphasis on democratisation and the evolution of humanitarian intervention. The module ends by examining a number of theoretical perspectives on power and resistance in a global era.
Marxism and International Relations
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module 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.
Marxism and International Relations: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module 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.
Mercenaries, Gangs and Terrorists: Private Security in International Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Monetary Theory and Policy
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The module begins with Keynes' reformulation of monetary theory and the application of Keynes' ideas to economic depressions. The bulk of the module deals with monetary policy in practice: the role of medium-term macroeconomic targets in policy-making; how policy should respond to new information in the short term; money demand; the money supply process; and how financial market imperfections should affect policy-making. The last part of the module deals with banks, financial crises and financial regulation.
Political Economy of the Environment: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Religions in Global Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
During this module you will explore the implications of the 'return' of religions, both 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'. You will primarily focus on the renewed centrality of religious 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', the module will encourage you to, firstly, 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), secondly, to engage critically with Huntington's thesis of the 'clash of civilisations' and thirdly to discuss the implications of this 'return' for the future of foreign policy and the normative structure and world order of contemporary international society.
Religions in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
During this module you will explore the implications of the 'return' of religions, both 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'. You will primarily focus on the renewed centrality of religious 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', the module will encourage you to, firstly, 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), secondly, to engage critically with Huntington's thesis of the 'clash of civilisations' and thirdly to discuss the implications of this 'return' for the future of foreign policy and the normative structure and world order of contemporary international society.
Russia and the Former Soviet Union in Global Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module explores the international politics of post-Soviet Russia and the former Soviet space. After a period of relative decline in the 1990s, Russia has more recently been described as a "rising Great Power" and developments in the CIS have returned to the news - from "gas wars" to the conflict between Russia and Georgia, and from the "democratic revolutions" in Ukraine, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan to the apparent erosion of democracy in Russia.
These developments have implications for Western Europe and beyond, touching on traditional and contemporary security issues, and shedding light on the implications of Western democracy promotion and the role of norms and identity in contemporary global politics.
This module will investigate the background for - and current development of - international relations in the region. You will look in detail at Russia's status as Great Power; the "colour revolutions" in Ukraine and Georgia; NATO and the US in the former Soviet space; the question of Europe's "energy security" and its relations with Russia; and what has been called the "new Great Game" between Russia, China and the US in Central Asia. In doing this, it will introduce relevant theoretical concepts related to foreign policy analysis and constructivist explanations of the role of norms and identity in the international politics of Russia and the FSU.
Russia and the Former Soviet Union in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module explores the international politics of post-Soviet Russia and the former Soviet space. After a period of relative decline in the 1990s, Russia has more recently been described as 'rising Great Power' and developments in the CIS have returned to the news - from 'gas wars' to the conflict between Russia and Georgia, from the 'democratic revolutions' in Ukraine, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan to the apparent erosion of democracy in Russia and talk of a "new Cold War" between Russia and the West.
These are developments with implications for Western Europe and beyond, touching on traditional and new security issues alike, and shedding light on the implications of Western democracy promotion and the role of norms and identity in contemporary global politics.
The module will investigate the background for and current development of international relations in the region - in particular Russia's status as great power, the 'colour revolutions' in Ukraine and Georgia and the 2008 war between Georgia and Russia, NATO and the US in the former Soviet space, the question of Europe's 'energy security' and its relations with Russia, and what has been called the 'new Great Game' between Russia, China and the US in Central Asia. In doing this, it will introduce relevant theoretical concepts related to foreign policy analysis and constructivist explanations of the role of norms and identity in the international politics of Russia and the FSU.
Sex and Death in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The Arms Trade in International Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The Economics of Development
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module addresses some of the major problems of economic development in low- and middle-income economies: the relationship between poverty, inequality and economic growth; long-run growth and structural change; microeconomic issues in agricultural development, including theories of peasant resource allocation and farm size and efficiency; market performance in the rural and informal sectors of less developed countries (LDCs); industrialisation and trade policy; the roles of monetary policy and foreign aid in resource mobilisation; stabilisation and structural adjustment; and investment in human capital.
The Political Economy of Latin American Development: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module provides a long-term historical account and analysis of Latin America's formation and integration into the modern world system. You will investigate patterns of growth and distribution of wealth over different periods of time and between countries. In particular, the course investigates how these patterns have influenced and have been shaped by three interrelated factors - domestic social structures, state formation and integration to the evolving world system.
Key issues covered include: the Iberian political economic lethargy; attempts at constructing cohesive state structures and state-led economic development; the influence of rural and urban social movements on the politico-economic structures of different countries; responses to globalisation, including the attempt at creating blocs across the region; and a discussion of the extent to which the current 'pink tide' (or red wave)constitutes a realistic alternative political-economic trajectory for the mass of the continent's population.
The Politics of International Trade: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module aims to equip you with an understanding of the international trade system and the theoretical traditions that have helped to shape it. It will begin by examining the core theories around trade and trade liberalisation, particularly those of liberalism, economic nationalism and neo-Marxism and other critical approaches, in order to explore different understandings of the relationship between trade and development. The empirical section of the module will start by examining the creation of the post-WWII trade regime centered on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and its evolution to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 1995. Core elements of, and controversies within, the global trade system will be scrutinised and situated within this historical context. These will include the fragmentation of the trade system engendered by regional trade agreements, the increasing role of emerging powers, including China, India and Brazil, and the impact of the trade system on developing countries. The module will also examine the contentious treatment of agriculture within the WTO and analyse the debates concerning ethical trade, gender and trade and the enviornment. Drawing on all of the above and integrated throughout the module, the module will evaluate and elucidate the current round of WTO trade negotiations - the Doha Development Agenda - with the aim of understanding why it has stalled and to consider the future prospects for a more equitable trading system.
The Politics of Terror
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module addresses the relationship between fear, security and identity in international politics. Typically, security is taken to defend already existing identities such as the national interest or the integrity of the environment. However, during this module you will explore the argument that security constitutes identity in relation to fear. That is to say, rather than simply defending extant entities, discourses of security produce novel identities. These identities are produced in relation to perceived fears. The question thus becomes how are fears constituted and what identities are secured against such perceived threats?
The module will begin with an examination of the nature of fear and identity in international politics. The remainder of the module will comprise an examination of the broadened security agenda of the post-Cold war era. The purpose of this examination will be to show the multiple ways in which fear is mobilised and the manifold identities thus produced. The consequences of such fears and identities will be examined in relation to cases such as ethnic nationalist conflict.
The Politics of Terror
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module offers an advanced level introduction to terrorism and political violence in modern societies. Through attention to case studies, academic literatures and original sources the module focuses on:
- the conceptual and analytical challenges of defining and understanding terrorism and political violence
- terror as a political instrument
- the relationship between state and non-state terror
- the historical development of terrorism and counterterrorism
- the organisational, ideological and strategic dynamics of terrorist organisations
- the policy dilemmas faced and principle methodologies employed by democratic and other states in countering terrorism
- the role of media, mass communication and 'public dismodule' in political violence
The module is divided into two sections. The first, studying terrorism: historical and conceptual issues, offers a thematic exploration of terrorism considering its 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 political violence within the changing context of state power, international and global politics, exploring the historical and contemporary relations between them. We conclude by surveying the origins and contemporary character of al-Qaeda type terrorism and how states have sought to counter it.
The Reign of Rights in Global Politics
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Proponents and opponents alike would today concur that human rights are becoming the world's secular religion (Eli Wiesel). This module systematically interrogates the rise of human rights to such prominence. You examines the history and evolution of rights within the history of liberalism and introduces the prominent ways of defining and understanding human rights. You explores new theorisations of rights as practices of governing and forms of subjectification in global politics. Moreover, the module discusses well-known critiques of the universality of human rights and their Western-centric conception of the human. You analyse the challenges that rights present to state sovereignty and examines the violent global politics associated with human rights, such as the emergence of human rights wars and the more recent, often racist, trade-off between rights and security within the ensemble of practices we call the 'war on terror'. You investigate the use of rights in our practices of resistance, analysing how rights delegitimise other paths of action whilst inciting rights-holders as appropriate political subjectivities.
It discusses the expansion of human rights into emergent areas such as women's rights, indigenous rights, etc (you will be able to select specific cases for further research and presentation to suit your particular interests) and explores the ways in which human rights talk becomes the hegemonic register in which to articulate and legitimate social/political action. We conclude by discussing the practical ethico-political problems of the reign of rights and of our own acceptance of this language in global politics. Do global interventionist practices render human rights the rights of those victims who have no (positive-constitutional) rights? Moreover, who can speak on behalf of subaltern others and finally, is the language of rights appropriate for righting historical and current wrongs?
The Reign of Rights in Global Politics: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Proponents and opponents alike would today concur that human rights are becoming the world's secular religion (Eli Wiesel). This module systematically interrogates the rise of human rights to such prominence. You examines the history and evolution of rights within the history of liberalism and introduces the prominent ways of defining and understanding human rights. You explores new theorisations of rights as practices of governing and forms of subjectification in global politics. Moreover, the module discusses well-known critiques of the universality of human rights and their Western-centric conception of the human. You analyse the challenges that rights present to state sovereignty and examines the violent global politics associated with human rights, such as the emergence of human rights wars and the more recent, often racist, trade-off between rights and security within the ensemble of practices we call the 'war on terror'. You investigate the use of rights in our practices of resistance, analysing how rights delegitimise other paths of action whilst inciting rights-holders as appropriate political subjectivities.
It discusses the expansion of human rights into emergent areas such as women's rights, indigenous rights, etc (you will be able to select specific cases for further research and presentation to suit your particular interests) and explores the ways in which human rights talk becomes the hegemonic register in which to articulate and legitimate social/political action. We conclude by discussing the practical ethico-political problems of the reign of rights and of our own acceptance of this language in global politics. Do global interventionist practices render human rights the rights of those victims who have no (positive-constitutional) rights? Moreover, who can speak on behalf of subaltern others and finally, is the language of rights appropriate for righting historical and current wrongs?
The United States in the World
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
As the 21st century begins, the United States is still the world's only superpower: no other nation possesses comparable military and economic power or has interests that reach the entire globe. To understand the place and power of the US in the contemporary world, it is vital to understand how its geopolitical strategies function, militarily and economically. Yet because US power is also secured through cultural and discursive strategies, it is equally important to analyse how US cultural/discursive products and processes participate in the construction of the US in all the varied ways it imagines itself. The aim of this module is to analyse how US cultural/discursive strategies participate in imagining the US in the world, either by being embedded within traditional geopolitical strategies or by sitting alongside them. Rather than taking an historical approach, the module is organised around specific theoretical and cultural/discursive themes and practices. These include architectural theory and the building of embassies abroad, design theory and designing the nation through everyday objects, film theory and screening the nation through popular film, remediation theory and virtually remediating the nation, entertainmentality theory and exhibiting the nation in museums, performance/performativity theory and re-enacting the nation though historical re-enactments as well as song, and advertising theory and advertising the nation to US citizens. Along the way, significant foreign and domestic policy debates from Cold War politics to the War on Terror to the US domestic War on illegal immigration will be considered through political, cultural, and discursive theories (eg Said's notion of orientalism, Foucault's notion of governmentality, Butler's notion of performativity, and Ranciere's notion of the birth of the nation).
The United States in the World: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
As the 21st century begins, the United States is still the world's only superpower: no other nation possesses comparable military and economic power or has interests that reach the entire globe. To understand the place and power of the US in the contemporary world, it is vital to understand how its geopolitical strategies function, militarily and economically. Yet because US power is also secured through cultural and discursive strategies, it is equally important to analyse how US cultural/discursive products and processes participate in the construction of the US in all the varied ways it imagines itself. The aim of this module is to analyse how US cultural/discursive strategies participate in imagining the US in the world, either by being embedded within traditional geopolitical strategies or by sitting alongside them. Rather than taking an historical approach, the module is organised around specific theoretical and cultural/discursive themes and practices. These include architectural theory and the building of embassies abroad, design theory and designing the nation through everyday objects, film theory and screening the nation through popular film, remediation theory and virtually remediating the nation, entertainmentality theory and exhibiting the nation in museums, performance/performativity theory and re-enacting the nation though historical re-enactments as well as song, and advertising theory and advertising the nation to US citizens. Along the way, significant foreign and domestic policy debates from Cold War politics to the War on Terror to the US domestic War on Illegal Immigration will be considered through political, cultural, and discursive theories (eg Said's notion of orientalism, Foucault's notion of governmentality, Butler's notion of performativity, and Ranciere's notion of the birth of the nation).
Understanding Global Markets
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is to give you an understanding of key features of the newly emerging globalised world economy. The module therefore comprises four components. The first of these analyses the conceptual background to understanding global markets, as well as examining the underlying changes in technology which have transformed economic relations between regions and nation states. The subsequent components then use that background in order to focus on the key characteristics and changes in: trade in goods and services, capital flow, and movement of people.
This module will cover the context of global markets: such as the emergence/development of global markets and understanding what can be meant by globalisation. We will also examine the impact of technological change on global markets (information technology, transport costs) as well as goods and services. Why do countries trade and why do countries integrate into regional blocs? We will study the evolution of patterns of trade: trade volumes, geographical patterns of trade (north-north, north-south, south-outh, regional groupings etc). We will look at vertical specialisation and value chains, outsourcing, offshoring, supply chaining. This module will also cover: the role of services in the global economy and the evolution of services trade; international capital flows; multinationals and foreign direct investment - theory and data; short run capital flows: global capital markets and origins of financial and exchange rate crises; labour migration, Why workers migrate: individual and family motives and the impact of migration on the home market and on the host market.
What is War
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
You will gain an advanced understanding of the place of war in the political world. What is war and how, if at all, is it different from other forms of violence? What is the relationship between war and politics? We will ask what war is and then investigate its relation to the fields of ethics, gender, sexuality, and culture. You will then use this knowledge to investigate specific forms of warfare, including genocide as a war of annihilation, insurgency/guerrilla warfare, and counterinsurgency. We conclude by addressing anti-war activism and related forms of civil disobedience as alternatives to war. You are provided with an advanced knowledge and analytical skills that will help you to think, talk, and write in an informed and critical manner about war.
What is War: in-depth Analysis
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
You will gain an advanced understanding of the place of war in the political world. What is war and how, if at all, is it different from other forms of violence? What is the relationship between war and politics? We will ask what war is and then investigate its relation to the fields of ethics, gender, sexuality, and culture. You will then use this knowledge to investigate specific forms of warfare, including genocide as a war of annihilation, insurgency/guerrilla warfare, and counterinsurgency. We conclude by addressing anti-war activism and related forms of civil disobedience as alternatives to war. You are provided with an advanced knowledge and analytical skills that will help you to think, talk, and write in an informed and critical manner about war.
Entry requirements
Sussex welcomes applications from students of all ages who show evidence of the academic maturity and broad educational background that suggests readiness to study at degree level. For most students, this will mean formal public examinations; details of some of the most common qualifications we accept are shown below. If you are an overseas student, refer to Applicants from outside the UK.
All teaching at Sussex is in the English language. If your first language is not English, you will also need to demonstrate that you meet our English language requirements.
A level
Typical offer: AAB
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade B.
International Baccalaureate
Typical offer: 35 points overall
For more information refer to International Baccalaureate.
Other qualifications
Access to HE Diploma
Typical offer: Pass the Access to HE Diploma with at least 45 credits at Level 3, of which 30 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher.
Specific entry requirements: The Access to HE Diploma should be in the social sciences. Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade B.
For more information refer to Access to HE Diploma.
Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass with grade A in the Diploma and A in the Additional and Specialist Learning
Specific entry requirements: The Additional and Specialist Learning must be an A-level (ideally in a humanities or social science subject). Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade B.
For more information refer to Advanced Diploma.
BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma
Typical offer: DDD
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade B.
For more information refer to BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.
European Baccalaureate
Typical offer: Overall result of 80%
For more information refer to European Baccalaureate.
Finnish Ylioppilastutkinto
Typical offer: Overall average result in the final matriculation examinations of at least 6.5
French Baccalauréat
Typical offer: Overall final result of at least 13.5/20
German Abitur
Typical offer: Overall result of 1.5 or better
Irish Leaving Certificate (Higher level)
Typical offer: AAAABB
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need to have evidence of good ability in Mathematics
Italian Diploma di Maturità or Diploma Pass di Esame di Stato
Typical offer: Final Diploma mark of at least 92/100
Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers
Typical offer: AAABB
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need Mathematics at Standard Grade, grade 1 or 2
For more information refer to Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers.
Spanish Titulo de Bachillerato (LOGSE)
Typical offer: Overall average result of at least 8.5
Welsh Baccalaureate Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass the Core plus at least AA in two A-levels
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade B.
For more information refer to Welsh Baccalaureate.
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5 overall, with not less than 6.0 in each section. Internet-based TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 19 in Reading, 21 in Speaking and 23 in Writing.
For more information, refer to alternative English language requirements.
For more information about the admissions process at Sussex:
Undergraduate Admissions,
Sussex House,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 678416
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E ug.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
Related subjects
Fees and funding
Fees
Home/EU students: £9,0001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £9,0002
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.
Care Leavers Award (2013)
Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 31 July 2014
For students have been in council care before starting at Sussex.
First-Generation Scholars Scheme (2013)
Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 13 June 2014
The scheme is targeted to help students from relatively low income families – ie those whose family income is up to £42,611.
First-Generation Scholars Scheme EU Student Award (2013)
Region: Europe (Non UK)
Level: UG
Application deadline: 13 June 2014
£3,000 fee waiver for UG Non-UK EU students whose family income is below £25,000
Careers and profiles
Career opportunities
Our courses prepare you for employment in fields such as accountancy and finance, management, or for work as an economist in a government, international or consulting agency.
Recent graduates have taken up a wide range of posts with employers including:
- assistant product merchandiser at Net-a-porter.com
- buyer at John Lewis
- consultant at Real Global Markets
- financial advisor at Lloyds Bank
- intern at Wilton Park (an executive agency of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office)
- investment banker at Bank of America
- media planning assistant at Future Publishing
- merchandise assistant at Jaeger
- economist at the Ministry of Defence
- director of promotions at NextHype Promotions
- junior market economist at Informer Global Markets
- pricing analyst at 1st Central.
Specific employer destinations listed are taken from recent Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education surveys, which are produced annually by the Higher Education Statistics Agency.
For more information, refer to Department of Economics: Career opportunities.
Career opportunities
Our course prepare you for employment with non-governmental organisations (eg Oxfam, Save the Children), international organisations (eg UN, World Bank), government ministries and multinational businesses.
Recent graduates have taken up a wide range of posts with employers including:
- bookseller at Winart Publications
- data analyst at GMB (trade union)
- editorial assistant at the Socialist Party
- financial recruitment manager at Grovelands Resources
- intern at Open Society
- project manager at American Express
- intern at Corporación Parque por la Paz Villa Grimaldi, museum and memorial of the former detention camp
- intern at Wilton Park (an executive agency of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office)
- media intern at Levi Strauss & Co
- trainee at the European Parliament
- intern at the British Embassy
- consulate official at the British Embassy
- corporate analyst at American Express.
Specific employer destinations listed are taken from recent Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education surveys, which are produced annually by the Higher Education Statistics Agency.
Careers and employability
For employers, it’s not so much what you know, but what you can do with your knowledge that counts. The experience and skills you’ll acquire during and beyond your studies will make you an attractive prospect. Initiatives such as SussexPlus, delivered by the Careers and Employability Centre, help you turn your skills to your career advantage. It’s good to know that 94 per cent of our graduates are in work or further study (Which? University).
For more information on the full range of initiatives that make up our career and employability plan for students, visit Careers and alumni.
Contact our School
School of Business, Management and Economics
The School of Business, Management and Economics is a unique, research-focused business school, which takes a strong policy-directed view on business practices while also developing the underlying core disciplines.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact the admissions tutor:
Department of Economics,
Jubilee Building,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SL, UK
E ug.admissions@economics.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 678889
F +44 (0)1273 873715
Department of Economics
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.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact the admissions tutor:
International Relations,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9QN, UK
E ug.admissions@ir.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 678892
F +44 (0)1273 673563
Department of International Relations
Visit us
Campus tours
We offer weekly guided campus tours.
Mature students at Sussex: information sessions
If you are 21 or over, and thinking about starting an undergraduate degree at Sussex, you may want to attend one of our mature student information sessions. Running between October and December, they include guidance on how to approach your application, finance and welfare advice, plus a guided campus tour with one of our current mature students.
Self-guided visits
If you are unable to make any of the visit opportunities listed, drop in Monday to Friday year round and collect a self-guided tour pack from Sussex House reception.
Go to Visit us and Open Days to book onto one of our tours.
Hannah's perspective
'Studying at Sussex gave me so many opportunities to really throw myself into university life, and being taught by enthusiastic academic staff who are involved in ground-breaking research meant that the education I received was second to none.
'Coming to an Open Day gave me a great insight into both academic and social life at Sussex. Working here means that I now get to tell others about my experiences and share all the great things about the University. And if you can’t make it to our Open Days, we’ve other opportunities to visit, or you can visit our Facebook page and our Visit us and Open Days pages.'
Hannah Steele
Graduate Intern, Student Recruitment Services
Aaron-Leslie's perspective
'Leaving home to study at Sussex was an exciting new experience, and settling in came naturally with all the different activities on campus throughout the year. There are loads of facilities available on your doorstep, both the Library and the gym are only ever a short walk away.
'My experience at Sussex has been amazing. It's a really friendly campus, the academics are helpful, and Brighton is just around the corner. I now work as a student ambassador, and help out at Open Days, sharing all the things I've grown to love about Sussex!'
Aaron-Leslie Williams
BSc in Mathematics
