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BA Modern History and Politics
About this course
Modern history and politics together address the forces that have shaped the world since the eighteenth century and the ideas, institutions, and power structures through which societies are governed today. History trains you to read the past critically, weighing evidence, understanding context, and recognising how later generations have reinterpreted earlier events to serve their own purposes. Politics examines the structures and processes of government, the distribution of power, the formation of policy, and the ideological frameworks through which people understand collective life. Together, the two disciplines illuminate how present arrangements came to be, and what pressures are working to change them. At the University of Essex, this three-year full-time degree gives you a thorough grounding in both fields while building meaningful connections between them. In your first year you study an Introduction to Politics module alongside your history modules, establishing the conceptual vocabulary that makes later comparative work more productive. In subsequent years you draw on the full range of options across both departments, allowing you to pursue your particular interests, whether in British or European history, comparative political systems, international relations, or political thought. Your final year includes a dissertation, which you may write in either history or politics, giving you the opportunity to pursue an extended piece of independent research on a topic of your choosing. This trains the kind of sustained, evidence-based argument that is central to both disciplines. The analytical and communication skills the degree develops are valued across a wide range of professional contexts. Graduates enter careers in journalism, public policy, the civil service, think tanks, international organisations, the legal professions, education, charities, and the media. The ability to read complex information critically, write clearly under pressure, and construct a persuasive argument is useful in almost any professional setting. Postgraduate study in modern history, political science, international relations, security studies, or public administration provides a natural continuation of the programme for those who wish to specialise further or pursue academic careers.
Syllabus & Modules
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