

BA/BSc Global Challenges
About this course
Global challenges, from climate change and inequality to migration and democratic backsliding, do not fit neatly within single disciplines. Understanding them requires the capacity to draw on social science, natural science, policy analysis, and cultural knowledge simultaneously, thinking across the boundaries that academic departments usually maintain. A degree designed around this insight prepares graduates not just with knowledge about specific issues but with the intellectual flexibility to engage with complex problems as they arise. At Brunel University London, this three-year full-time programme draws on research-led teaching from across the social and natural sciences, as well as on Brunel's longstanding expertise in professional and applied education. You will engage with questions in politics, society, culture, environment, and development, developing critical perspectives that allow you to interrogate how global challenges are framed and addressed. The programme supports personalised learning, with opportunities for real-world experience, applied group projects, and placements that connect your academic study to professional and community contexts. This applied dimension distinguishes the degree from more purely theoretical programmes, ensuring that the skills you develop are connected to the kinds of problems that organisations working on global issues actually face. With a typical entry tariff of 104 UCAS points, the course welcomes students with a genuine interest in the world's most pressing questions. Graduates from programmes of this kind are well positioned for careers in international organisations, NGOs, development agencies, government departments, policy think tanks, journalism, and the growing number of businesses and social enterprises that take global challenges seriously. The analytical and communication skills developed across the programme are broadly valued, and many graduates find their degree opens doors in unexpected directions. Postgraduate study in international development, global governance, environmental policy, or area studies provides a natural continuation for those who wish to specialise further.
Syllabus & Modules
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