Course summary
The MSc in Medical Anthropology offers a fascinating opportunity to study contemporary global health and wellbeing issues from an anthropological standpoint, considering social and cultural influences, the relationship with the environment and how change and development take place over time. This biosocial approach to the anthropology of health, supported by cutting-edge research in the Department, contributes to a stimulating and fast moving learning environment and draws students from a wide range of backgrounds. The course provides a strong grounding in the ethnographic approach to the study of health, looking at the impact of culture and custom, as well as the development of health as a political issue and the application of anthropology to modern public health concerns. Central to the MSc is the development of strong research skills, which you will be encouraged to put into practice, including the opportunity to present your work at the Department’s annual postgraduate conference. Much of the teaching on the course is carried out by academic researchers from the Department’s highly regarded Anthropology of Health Research Group, which brings together the areas of biological and social anthropology, community medicine, evolutionary medicine, social epidemiology and public health at local, regional and international levels. The course consists of core and optional modules and a dissertation, undertaken over one year on a full-time basis or over two years part time and features a mixture of interactive lectures, seminars, practical sessions and workshops. As an anthropology student, you will have access to the Department’s highly respected research laboratories including the Durham Infancy and Sleep Centre, Behavioural and Ecological Physiology Lab, Physical Activity Lab, the South Africa field station and to material culture and skeletal collections. Course structure Core modules: Anthropology of Global Health examines a range of theoretical perspectives and approaches within medical anthropology and shows you how they can be applied to contemporary issues in global health. Society, Health and Wellbeing sets out the theories and approaches within the social sciences which are applicable to health and identifies the social and political factors relating to health and health inequalities. You will then use the information to examine a range of contemporary health issues, primarily in industrial and post-industrial societies. The Dissertation gives you the opportunity to carry out your own independent research on a subject of particular interest, applying your learning from the research methods modules. You will be expected to write a literature review, collect data through fieldwork activity, laboratory work or from published sources, conduct data analysis and put together a presentation of your findings. Plus one from:
- Statistical Exploration and Reasoning;
- Fieldwork and Interpretation.
Modules
Examples of optional modules: Advanced Studies in Anthropology, Art, and Experience; Advanced Studies in Mediterranean Connections; Advanced Studies in the Social Anthropology of Hormones; Advanced Studies in the Anthropology of Sport; Advanced Studies in Anthropological Skills for Climate Change Survival; Advanced Studies in Capitalism in Ruins; Advanced Studies in Power and Governance; Advanced Studies in Violence and Memory; Advanced Studies in the Anthropology of Tobacco; Advanced Studies in the Anthropology of Health Inequality; Advanced Studies in the Anthropology of Physical Activity for Health; Advanced Studies in Evolutionary Medicine: Maternal and Infant Health; Advanced Studies in Human Reproductive Ecology; Advanced Studies in Development, Conflict and Crisis in the Lower Omo Valley; Advanced Studies in the Evolution of Cooperation; Advanced Studies in Comparative Cognition and Culture; Advanced Studies in the Cultural Evolution of Music; Advanced Studies in Technological Primates; Advanced Studies in Primates in Peril; Advanced Studies in Primates, Predators and the Ecology of Fear; Advanced Studies in Homo narrans: evolutionary anthropology of fiction; Advanced Studies in Forensic Anthropology; Advanced Studies in Palaeoanthropology and Palaeoecology; Advanced Studies in the Anthropology of Data and Quantification; Advanced Studies in Anthropology of the Body; Advanced Studies in Food Security, Nutrition and Sustainable Livelihoods; Advanced Specialised Aspects in Evolutionary Anthropology; Advanced Specialised Aspects in Health and Medical Anthropology; Advanced Specialised Aspects in Social Anthropology; Understanding Society and Culture; Interrogating Ethnography; Anthropology and Development; Society, Energy, Environment and Resilience; Thinking Anthropologically; Climate and Energy - Intensive Study; A language module offered by the Centre for Foreign Language Studies.
Assessment method
The full-time course runs from October to September, and you will attend classes between October and March with assessment in April and May. You will then complete your dissertation by September. Learning takes place through a mixture of interactive lectures, seminars, practical sessions and workshops, in addition to one-to-one dissertation supervision. The lectures present you with information on current health topics and the seminars give you the opportunity for further discussion and debate in a stimulating and supportive academic environment. As a full-time student, you will have on average 6-8 hours of formal teaching and learning contact each week and you will also be expected to join weekly departmental and Anthropology of Health Research Group research seminars. Outside the timetabled contact hours, you will be expected to devote a significant amount of time to reading, discussing and preparing for classes, assignments and project work. Assessment is thorough and ongoing throughout the course. Your course activities are assessed by a mixture of assignment and project work. You will also complete a dissertation, which is a significant piece of work on a subject of particular interest chosen by you with guidance and support from your tutor.
How to apply
International applicants
If you are an international student who does not meet the requirements for direct entry to this degree, you may be eligible to take a pre-Masters pathway programme at the Durham University International Study Centre.
Entry requirements
A minimum 2:1 Honours degree from a UK institution (or the overseas equivalent) in a relevant subject. References play an important part in the admissions process.
English language requirements
Durham University welcomes applications from all students irrespective of background. We encourage the recruitment of academically well-qualified and highly motivated students, who are non-native speakers of English, whose full potential can be realised with a limited amount of English Language training either prior to entry or through pre-sessional and/or in-sessional courses. It is the normal expectation that candidates for admission should be able to demonstrate satisfactory English proficiency before the start of a programme of study, whether via the submission of an appropriate English language qualification or by attendance on an appropriate pre-sessional course. Acceptable evidence and levels required can be viewed by following the link provided.
English language requirements
https://www.durham.ac.uk/study/international/entry-requirements/english-language-requirements/
Fees and funding
Tuition fees
England | £12500 | Year 1 |
Northern Ireland | £12500 | Year 1 |
Scotland | £12500 | Year 1 |
Wales | £12500 | Year 1 |
Channel Islands | £12500 | Year 1 |
EU | £26500 | Year 1 |
International | £26500 | Year 1 |
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
Sponsorship information
For further information see the course listing.
Provider information
Durham University
The Palatine Centre
Stockton Road
Durham
DH1 3LE