MA in Geopolitics & Connectivity
Groningen, Netherlands
DURATION
1 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
15 Jan 2025*
EARLIEST START DATE
01 Feb 2025
TUITION FEES
EUR 18,700 / per year **
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* EU/EEA and non-EU/EEA students: May 1 - Dutch students: August 15
** for Non-EU|for EU/EEA EUR 2,530
Introduction
What can we learn about how attempts to create order in the world have to do with how things are connected and disconnected?
How is it that nationalisms and identities, economic systems, ideologies, inequalities, environmental and health issues, as well as belief systems, are used to connect and disconnect people, ideas, and places creating (new) geopolitical realities?
In this track you will be introduced to a novel approach, developed and led by colleagues at Groningen, to understand geopolitics as a connectivity effect. You will learn how spaces are and have been, the result of connecting (strategically or not), many of the issues mentioned above. Drawing on historical and contemporary case studies and issues, you will develop unique analytical skills to approach any geopolitical issue in time.
Some questions inspired by this approach are, for example, how has the United States tried to change the terms under which it connects to the world in an attempt to force a different geopolitical context? How is China resetting the terms for its global connectivity through its Belt and Road initiative(s)? How is the European Union attempting to develop an environmental agenda to connect its members and create its geopolitical projection in the world? How do actors in the global realm challenge or benefit from these geopolitical aspirations? How do certain people and regions choose, and have chosen, to geopolitically disconnect from global designs?
Methodologically, you will learn how conflicts and wars, pandemics and environmental disasters, economic and financial crises, systemic infrastructural failures, and different forms of radicalisms, alert us of failing connectivities and the emerging of new ones, and how you can use these connectivities to understand and theorize an ever-emerging world. You will learn how geopolitical designs in time have resulted from the strategic connection of complex issues and interests, and how such designs have resulted from thinking space and power creatively.
Why study this program in Groningen?
The track G&C:
- Enables to design a study program tailored to your needs and interests.
- Offers a research-led and policy-oriented curriculum taught by committed staff.
- Includes a placement that excellently prepares for the labor market.
- Provides you with a research-oriented profile that makes you fit for participation in a Research Master and/or a Ph.D. track.
- Is embedded in a university that provides a genuine international environment in the sparkling city of Groningen.
Research
Research at the Chair Group on History and Theory of International relations revolves around two overlapping fields: Modes of Reasoning about an order, power, and governance; and The Politics of Global Connectivities. Common to them is a concern with understanding the making of orders of governance as well as advancing and refining traditional and alternative methodological approaches to the study of history and theory of international relations, such as Historical Epistemology.
Curriculum
This track within the Master's degree program International Relations is 60 ECTS. The basic element is the module Advanced Theory of International Relations. This module must be followed by all students. You choose two research seminars (at least one of which in G&C) and you will follow a Capita G&C, all in your first semester. During your second semester, you will write a Master's thesis (in the field of G&C) and you will do a placement.
Courses
- Advanced Theory of International Relations (5 EC)
- Research Seminar 1 (10 EC)
- Research Seminar 2 (10 EC)
- Capita Geopolitics & Connectivity (5 EC)
- Master's Placement (10 EC)
- Master's Thesis Geopolitics & Connectivity (20 EC)
Curriculum
Because the track starts in September as well as in February, all courses are offered both in the first and in the second semester.
Examples of Research Seminars Geopolitics & Connectivity are: 'Maps and Power', 'Regional Powers in the Caspian', and 'Energy Security'. The topics of the research seminars differ every year, so these are merely examples.
Program options
Master's placement (specialization)
Study abroad
- Study abroad is unaccommodated
Admissions
Career Opportunities
Job prospects
The Master program in International Relations prepares its students for professions and research careers where knowledge of international-political developments and the ability to analyze and assess complex issues and to form grounded judgments are relevant.
Many graduates become policy advisors for national governments, NGOs, and international organizations in international politics. An increasing number of graduates also use their analytical skills to advise international businesses. Research, media, and communication are also prospective fields of employment.