

MA Modern Languages (Russian and Spanish) and International Relations
About this course
Russian, Spanish, and international relations together form one of the most ambitious and globally significant combinations that a university degree can offer. Russian and Spanish are two of the world's most geopolitically important languages, each giving access to vast cultural, literary, and intellectual traditions and to the political and economic realities of regions that are central to contemporary international affairs. Russia is a permanent member of the UN Security Council with enormous natural resource wealth and a historical role in shaping European and global order. The Spanish-speaking world encompasses Latin America, one of the most demographically and economically dynamic regions on earth, as well as Spain. International relations provides the analytical framework to understand how these and other actors interact across the international system, through diplomacy, trade, conflict, and cooperation. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time degree with a year abroad develops genuine competence across all three strands. The Russian component develops high-level grammatical accuracy and oral proficiency alongside engagement with Russian literature, film, cultural history, and contemporary society. The Spanish strand builds practical language competence alongside cultural and literary knowledge of the Spanish-speaking world. International relations provides rigorous training in the theories, history, and current challenges of international politics. The year abroad provides immersive experience in a Russian or Spanish-speaking academic and cultural environment. The combination of Russian, Spanish, and international relations is exceptionally rare among graduates and is specifically valued in roles requiring both linguistic depth and political understanding. Career pathways include the diplomatic and foreign services, international journalism, UN and other international organisations, think tanks, NGOs, intelligence analysis, business development in emerging markets, and roles in the energy, development, or security sectors that require knowledge of Russia or Latin America specifically. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in international relations, area studies, political science, or translation, using the degree's distinctive combination as the foundation for specialist research or professional careers.
Syllabus & Modules
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