

BA Sociology and International Development
About this course
Sociology and International Development is a combination that equips you to understand the global challenges of our time, from climate change and migration to conflict and economic inequality, with both analytical depth and a concern for the structural causes of human suffering. Sociology provides the tools to understand how societies are organised, how power operates, and how social change happens. International development asks how these insights can be applied to the task of improving lives and reducing poverty at a global scale. At the University of Sussex, this three-year full-time programme includes a foundation year, a sandwich placement year, and a year abroad, as well as opportunities for work placements. This means your degree is structured to give you both intellectual rigour and practical engagement with the field. You will explore global challenges through their historical legacies and contemporary power structures, examining how colonialism, capitalism, and geopolitical dynamics shape the development prospects of different regions and communities. Sociology gives you the conceptual vocabulary to analyse inequality, identity, power, and social change, while the international development strand takes you into questions of policy, aid, governance, and community-led approaches to change. The placement year and year abroad give you direct professional and cross-cultural experience that is essential in a field where most roles require you to work across national and cultural boundaries. Graduates work in international NGOs, development agencies, government departments, research institutes, journalism, social enterprise, and the humanitarian sector. Roles in policy analysis, project management, research, advocacy, and community development are all well within reach. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in development studies, social policy, international relations, or anthropology, building on the conceptual and practical foundations the undergraduate degree provides.
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