Programme syllabus autumn 2021
Programme syllabus autumn 2021
Title
Political Science: Global Politics, Master’s Programme (Two-year)
Swedish title
Statsvetenskap: Global politik
Programme code
SASGP
Credits
120 credits
Programme establishment date
2016-06-03
Syllabus approval date
2018-09-17
Syllabus valid from
2019-09-02
Decision-making body
Faculty of Culture and Society
Entry requirements
A Bachelor’s Degree within a social science field, e.g., Political Science, Peace and Conflict Studies, International Relations, Human Rights or a related major field. English B/6
Level
Advanced level
Organisation
The central focus of the programme is an interest in the various forms that politics takes at the transnational level, including its place within and effects upon particular societal contexts. The aim of the programme is to give students a basis for understanding and critically relating to four central tendencies within our contemporary world:
- agental pluralism – that political decisions involve not just the nation-state but numerous actors at multiple levels, including Intergovernmental Organisations, interest- and issue-groups, businesses, epistemic communities, and other emergent forms of actor;
- the transnationalisation of governance - a movement away from politics as structured in terms of top-down relations within nation-states towards more complex and networked forms of governance;
- the transnationalisation of political contestation – that civil society and other actors seeking to change politics both work across national boundaries and see their political demands as going beyond purely national concerns; and,
- the transnationalisation of policy problems – that there has been a shift in how policy problems are understood so that, for example, in the 1960s there was a shift from seeing environmental pollution within the confines of the nation-state towards identifying it as a transboundary phenomenon.
Programme contents
Semester 1, autumn 2021
Political Science: Global Politics as Social Science
GP616L, 30 credits (COMPULSORY)
Main field of study: Political Science
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Semester 2, spring 2022
Political Science: The Politics of Pluralism
ST620L, 7.5 credits (COMPULSORY)
Main field of study: Political Science
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Decision Making, States and Institutions
GP620L, 7.5 credits (COMPULSORY)
Main field of study: Political Science
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Political Science: Social Science Methods for Global Politics
ST624L, 15 credits (COMPULSORY)
Main field of study: Political Science
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Semester 3, autumn 2022
Internship
GP614L, 30 credits (ELECTIVE)
No main field of study
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Research internship
GP615L, 30 credits (ELECTIVE)
No main field of study
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Semester 4, spring 2023
Political Science: Master's thesis
ST631L, 30 credits (COMPULSORY)
Main field of study: Political Science
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Learning outcomes
Knowledge and understanding
Following successful completion of the course students should be able to:
- demonstrate knowledge and understanding in the main field of study, including both broad knowledge of the field and a considerable degree of specialised knowledge in certain areas of the field as well as insight into current research and development work, and
- demonstrate knowledge and understanding of methodological approaches in the field of Global Politics and of their consequences for research outcomes.
Competence and skills
Following successful completion of the course students should be able to:
- demonstrate the ability to critically and systematically integrate knowledge and analyse, assess and deal with complex phenomena, issues and situations even with limited information
- demonstrate the ability to identify and formulate issues critically, autonomously and creatively as well as to plan and, using appropriate methods, undertake advanced tasks within predetermined time frames and so contribute to the formation of knowledge as well as the ability to evaluate this work
- demonstrate the ability in speech and writing to clearly report and discuss his or her conclusions and the knowledge and arguments on which they are based in dialogue with different audiences, and
- demonstrate the skills required for participation in research and development work or autonomous employment in some other qualified capacity.
Judgement and approach
Following successful completion of the course students should be able to:
- demonstrate the ability to make assessments in the main field of study informed by relevant disciplinary, social and ethical issues and also to demonstrate awareness of ethical aspects of research and development work
- demonstrate insight into the possibilities and limitations of research, its role in society and the responsibility of the individual for how it is used, and
- demonstrate the ability to identify the personal need for further knowledge and take responsibility for her or his ongoing learning.
Degree
Master's Degree (120 credits)
Master of Arts (120 credits) with a Major in Political Science
Additional information
Language of instruction: English
The language of teaching is English.
Each individual syllabus contains the entry requirements for advancing in the programme.