

MA Economics and Gaelic Studies
About this course
Economics and Gaelic studies is an unusual and genuinely enriching combination, bringing together the rigorous analytical science of economics with the study of Scotland's oldest living language and the culture and history it carries. Economics provides the theoretical and quantitative tools to understand how markets, institutions, and policies shape outcomes for individuals and societies, including the economic dimensions of small nations and minority language communities that economics as a discipline has increasingly engaged with. Gaelic, spoken for millennia in Scotland and deeply woven into the Highland and island landscapes, literature, music, and social life of the country, offers a very different kind of knowledge: linguistic, cultural, and historical, and connected to questions of identity, heritage, and community that have their own economic implications. At the University of Aberdeen, this four-year full-time programme with a year abroad develops both strands in genuine depth. You will study the core principles of micro- and macroeconomics, developing the analytical and quantitative skills needed to understand how economies function and how policies affect them, alongside the business-related economics that prepares graduates for commercial careers. The Gaelic component develops linguistic proficiency in Scotland's oldest living language alongside an exploration of its origins, literature, history, and cultural context. The combination develops an unusual set of intellectual resources: the rigour of economic analysis and the depth of cultural and linguistic understanding that only serious engagement with a minority language tradition can provide. The year abroad extends both your economic and your cultural perspectives. Graduates enter careers across business, finance, the civil service, cultural organisations, and roles with a Scottish or international dimension where the combination of economic analysis and cultural knowledge is particularly valued. Public sector roles in Scotland, including in language policy, economic development, and heritage, draw on both strands of the degree. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in economics, Celtic studies, Scottish studies, or related fields, using the degree's analytical and linguistic foundations as a platform for specialist academic or professional development.
Syllabus & Modules
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