

BA International Development with a Language
About this course
International development is the field of study and practice concerned with reducing poverty, inequality, and human suffering at the global level, and with understanding the economic, political, social, and environmental forces that produce and perpetuate them. It asks how wealth and power are distributed across the world, why some countries and communities remain trapped in conditions of deprivation while others flourish, what development means and who gets to define it, and what interventions, institutions, and movements have succeeded or failed in promoting more equitable outcomes. It is a field that requires both analytical rigour and genuine engagement with the values and political choices that underlie development policy and practice. Adding a language to international development studies provides both a practical tool for working in specific regions and a deepened understanding of the cultural contexts that shape development challenges. At the University of Sussex, this three-year full-time programme with a foundation year, sandwich year, year abroad, and work placement provides an unusually rich combination of academic depth and professional experience. You will engage with the institutional legacies of colonialism and the structures of power that shape global inequality, examining topics including climate justice, gender and development, financial systems, social movements, health, and technology. The language component develops practical linguistic competence alongside cultural knowledge relevant to the region you are studying. The year abroad and work placement give you direct experience of working on development challenges in an applied context, building the professional skills and international experience that development organisations and NGOs value highly in recruits. Graduates enter careers in international development organisations, NGOs, the civil service, UN agencies, research institutions, journalism, policy consultancy, and international business. The combination of analytical depth, critical perspective, language skills, and international experience makes graduates highly competitive for roles in institutions such as the World Bank, UNICEF, Oxfam, Amnesty International, and bilateral development agencies. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in international development, global governance, conflict studies, public health, or environmental policy, building the specialist expertise needed for senior professional or research roles.
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