

MA International Relations and Social Anthropology
About this course
International relations and social anthropology is a combination that addresses some of the most pressing questions of the contemporary world from two distinct but complementary perspectives. International relations examines the structures and processes that govern how states and other actors interact, exploring the causes of war and peace, the formation of foreign policy, the functioning of international institutions, trade regimes, human rights frameworks, and the relationship between political power and economic development. Social anthropology approaches human life from the ground up, using ethnographic methods and cross-cultural comparison to understand how people in different societies make sense of their world, organise their communities, and construct meaning. At St Andrews, this four-year MA (Hons) degree allows you to pursue both disciplines in depth, developing the theoretical and analytical tools to engage with global challenges at multiple levels of analysis. International relations modules will give you frameworks for understanding geopolitics, international law, terrorism, and diplomacy. Social anthropology will train you in ethnographic thinking, cultural comparison, and the careful attention to context that prevents oversimplification when engaging with societies different from your own. The degree includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at a partner institution overseas and develop the international perspective that both subjects demand. The combination trains you to move between macro-level structural analysis and the close, contextual understanding of how people actually live. Graduates of international relations and social anthropology degrees are well prepared for careers in diplomacy, international organisations, non-governmental organisations, humanitarian work, journalism, and public policy. The combination of geopolitical understanding and cultural sensitivity is particularly valued in roles that require engagement across national and cultural boundaries. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in international relations, development studies, area studies, or anthropology, while others enter the civil service, think tanks, or international business.
Syllabus & Modules
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