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Social Sciences

MSc International Relations

Programme director
Tereza Capelos
Programme length
Full-time: 12 months, Part-time: 24 months
Programme start date
September 2013

Giving you the ability to critically evaluate key contemporary debates in the study of international relations.

Programme overview

This programme will give you the ability to critically evaluate key contemporary debates in the study of international relations, particularly in relation to the nature of the international system and processes of global governance. You will also explore the links between local, national and international structures.

The programme is composed of three pathways. The International Relations stream provides you with a deep understanding of key issues in the contemporary international system. The second pathway, Terrorism and Security, offers the opportunity to focus on the key domestic and international security threats facing states in the twenty-first century. It also looks at the nature and effectiveness of policy responses developed at the national, regional and international levels. Finally, the innovative International Intervention stream will enable you to understand and evaluate contemporary debates in the study of international intervention. It also includes a placement dimension, allowing you to spend three months working in the field of international politics and to develop the contacts and transferable skills which will be crucial in helping you to make the transition from study to work.

You will take three compulsory modules, as well as one to two compulsory modules associated with each pathway. This will allow you to take three to four optional modules from a selection of international modules, depending on the pathway chosen. Finally, the International Relations programme will provide you with the skills necessary to design and complete a dissertation or placement project on a specialist topic.

Entry requirements

A first or 2.1 undergraduate degree in a relevant social science or humanities discipline (or an equivalent qualification). 

English language requirements

IELTS minimum overall: 6.5

IELTS minimum by component: 6.0

Fees and funding

All fees are subject to increase or review for subsequent academic years. Please note that not all visa routes permit part-time study and overseas students entering the UK on a Tier 4 visa will not be permitted to study on a part-time basis.

Programme name Study mode Start date UK/EU fees Overseas fees
MSc International RelationsFull-timeSept 2013Please enquirePlease enquire
MSc International RelationsPart-timeSept 2013Please enquirePlease enquire

Programme content

Compulsory Modules

Introduction to Research

This module provides an introduction to the design and conduct of social science research. Emphasis is placed on the applicability of these methods to other subject areas across the social sciences.

Research in Practice

This module has a strong practical focus. You will gain experience of using both qualitative and quantitative methods, and applying your knowledge of research methods.

Theories of International Relations

The module explores a range of theoretical approaches to study of International Relations thus introducing students to different ways current trends in the international system. The module will follow a historiographical approach thus starting with the “classical debates in IR theories, then moving on to mainstream debates and concluding with critical approaches

Optional modules include:

Global Governance

This module provides a general introduction to the contemporary system of global governance. It seeks to provide students with a general overview of key concepts, structures and theoretical debates in this field. It looks at the links between national and international politics and encourages students to think critically about social, political and economic trends.

Politics of International Intervention 1

This module will examine, from both a theoretical and a practical perspective, the different kinds of international intervention in response to poverty, humanitarian crisis, abuses of human rights, state failure and armed conflict.

Politics of International Intervention 2

This module builds on Politics of International Intervention 1 by requiring students to deliver a critical analysis of the failures and successes of intervention in two respects: first, to critique the theoretical literature on intervention in respect of its explanatory power – students are thus required to explore the relative utility of varying analytical frameworks against the background of that which they seek to explain; second, to critique the practice of intervention– students will develop the skills to compare and contrast intervention in different crises. They will also learn to evaluate the relative successes and account for them.

Terrorism Studies

This module provides the opportunity for students to explore a range of contemporary and historical case studies of the use of political violence by non-state and state actors. The module will analyse the utility of a range of theoretical perspectives in explaining the sources of terrorism and the potential solutions to political violence.

Security Studies

Security Studies offers a critical introduction to the major philosophical and contemporary debates that structure the sub-discipline. The module is organised around core questions in the field of security studies, such as: What is security? Security for whom or for what? Security from whom or from what? How should security be achieved? And is security possible? First, students are introduced to the major competing conceptual positions within the sub-discipline. Second, students will explore some of the most pertinent case studies and issues in international security today, including military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, as well as human security issues such as environmental change, health and poverty.

International Security and Defence

This module will enable the student to examine different types of state, non-state and international, regional and sub-regional security and defence providers in the context of new security threats, including the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, failed states and the new interventionism. Actors include the UN, the EU, NATO, ECOWAS, the US, France, Germany, the UK, Poland, NGOs and private military companies. Students will have the opportunity to engage with a variety of relevant theoretical approaches which in turn will provide them with the tools to analyse how these different security actors have evolved, how they cooperate or conflict with each other and the role each plays in the new international security environment.

Key Issues in International Relations

This module provides an opportunity for students to investigate and discuss contemporary developments in international politics. The specific content varies to meet contemporary issues. Typically, the module will cover a range of issues, at regional and international levels, such as the environment, globalisation, nationalism, international conflicts and economic developments.

International Political Economy

This module provides an opportunity for students to apply their understanding of key theories and debates in international political economy (IPE) to current developments and case studies. Students will be able to discuss and debate the role of the main IPE institutions with a focus on the Asia-Pacific region. Current and future challenges to the status quo of IPE are also discussed.

American Foreign Policy

The first half of this module introduces students to the different schools of thought on American foreign policy. This provides students with the vocabulary to then interpret and assess US foreign policy since the end of the Cold War. The second half of the module introduces students to key contemporary issues in American foreign policy.

The EU and Its Neighbourhood

This module considers the EU’s perception of threats and opportunities and the methods it employs in order to reduce threat and maximise potential. Identity is a particular focus: what it means to be European and how much of that identity is shaped by the EU versus other actors. Specific policy areas are examined, including the European Neighbourhood Policy, Eastern Partnership, Union for the Mediterranean and Black Sea Synergy. Russia is treated as a particular case that reveals the successes of the EU’s multilateral activities and the complexities engendered by its member states’ bilateral relationships.

Teaching and assessment

For each pathway, there is a similar pattern of teaching and assessment. In the first semester, you will take four modules. For each of these, there is a weekly two-hour block, which combines lectures and student discussion. Assessment in this semester is all by coursework. In the second semester, you take another four modules, again with a weekly class. The only difference here is that some of these modules have a final examination. Once the taught part of the programme is finished in early summer, you will work on your dissertation or placement and placement project until the end of the summer, supported by regular supervision from the Department.

Teaching Hours

Full-time students typically have eight contact hours of teaching per week and are expected to spend approximately 30 additional hours on independent study.

Our School

The School of Politics was created in 2004, bringing together and reinforcing the various elements of politics teaching and research which have existed at Surrey since the 1970s. Our academics are all research-active, and the teaching you will receive on our MSc degrees reflects those interests, helping to make your work all the more engaged and relevant to current issues and debates. The School has a very active student body which organises many academic and social events outside the formal programme. With students coming from all over the world, this is an excellent opportunity to meet and challenge each other’s ideas and perceptions.

Dual MSc's with North Carolina State University and Seoul National University

This programme offers a unique opportunity for high-achieving students to study for a first year on one of our MSc programmes at Surrey, then for a further year to obtain the Master of International Studies (MIS) at North Carolina State University (NCSU). Alternatively, students study for the MSc in International Relations at Surrey in their first year, then for an MA in International Relations at Seoul National University (SNU), South Korea, in their second year.

This programme allows students to specialise in two distinct subfields of politics and international relations whilst gaining experience of different cultural and educational environments. It provides, therefore, an opportunity for students to maximise their potential and exposure to American or South Korean academic life and scholarship. It also builds on the extensive expertise in politics available at our institution.

Students will be able to apply for the dual master’s programme once they have successfully completed one semester at the University of Surrey. Once the student has been deemed to have satisfied all the requirements, the application will be forwarded to NCSU or SNU for consideration. The MSc at Surrey counts as the equivalent of the first year of the two-year MIS at NCSU or of the MA in International Relations at SNU. Therefore it is possible to complete the two master’s degrees in two years. In addition to the formal academic programme, both NCSU and SNU offer acculturation workshops for incoming students from overseas.

Your future career

Our MSc programmes are a great stepping stone in your career development, whatever your plans. Through its assessed, three-month placement, the International Intervention pathway offers an excellent opportunity to enhance a wide range of transferable skills and build personal networks which will significantly enhance your employment opportunities upon graduation.

Students from the School have gone on to a wide range of activities. These include working for international organisations, national and local government, lobby groups and non-governmental organisations, as well as private businesses and media organisations. If you wish to continue your studies, we also offer doctoral supervision in a wide range of political subjects.

Apply now

Department links

Politics

Contact us

For general enquiries

0800 980 3200 or +44 (0)1483 681 681

pg-enquiries@surrey.ac.uk

For admissions enquiries

+44 (0)1483 682 885

politics-admissions@surrey.ac.uk

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Page Owner: mf0009
Page Created: Tuesday 28 August 2012 09:54:15 by mf0009
Last Modified: Friday 1 February 2013 17:03:33 by pr0004
Expiry Date: Thursday 28 November 2013 09:51:46
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