Course summary
The MA Religion in Global Politics is designed to appeal to policy-makers, analysts, journalists and researchers in either international, national or regional institutions and organisations engaged in policy formation, inter-religious dialogue and community development, social work, development, conflict resolution, peace building or diversity management. It will also provide a solid basis from which to pursue doctoral study. The programme is intended to enable professional development in the area of 'Religion and Politics' as well to provide pre-doctoral research training in social scientific analyses of 'Religion and Politics'. The so-called 'resurgence' of religion in the public sphere in recent decades is now a significant area of interdisciplinary scholarship eliciting a complex array of responses, ranging from vehement opposition to the very idea that religious concepts and commitments have a right to expression in political debates, to a reassessment of the origins and implications of divisions between the secular and the religious and their relationship to the nation state. The notion that there is no singular secularism, but rather a plurality of secularisms, and of ‘religion’ as an invention of European modernity and colonial interests are two of many emerging efforts to reconceptualise the meanings of religion and the secular and the entangled relationship between them.
Modules
Compulsory modules: dissertation in religion in global politics; religion in global politics: theories and themes. Optional modules may include: communication, culture and politics in the Middle East: theoretical and analytical approaches; culture and conflict in the Himalaya; eastern and orthodox Christianity; human rights and Islamic law; human rights in the developing world; imagining Pakistan: culture, politics and gender; Iran: history, culture, politics; Israel, the Arab world and the Palestinians; Jainism: history, doctrine and the contemporary worlds; modern Muslim thinkers of South Asia; modern trends in Islam; Muslim Britain: perspectives and realities; religious practice in Japan: texts, rituals and believers; Taiwan's politics and cross-strait relations; the politics of culture in contemporary South Asia; Zionist ideology; Zoroastrianism: historical and contemporary perspectives.
Entry requirements
We will consider all applications with 2:ii (or international equivalent) or higher. In addition to degree classification we take into account other elements of the application including supporting statement and references.
Fees and funding
Tuition fees
No fee information has been provided for this course
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website .
Additional fee information
Provider information
SOAS University of London
Thornhaugh Street
Russell Square
Camden
WC1H 0XG