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School of Law, Politics and Sociology

History and Politics (with a professional placement year)

(BA) History and Politics (with a professional placement year)

Entry for 2022

FHEQ level

This course is set at Level 6 in the national Framework for Higher Education Qualifications.

Course learning outcomes

Identify and describe and illustrate key approaches to the study of politics and understand the contested nature of knowledge and understanding

Identify and understand the key normative ideas and concepts which serve as the foundations of politics

Describe and illustrate the structure and operation of different political systems

Describe and illustrate the key explanatory concepts and theories used in the study of politics

Develop a familiarity with major methods of data collection in politics, and their appropriate uses

Develop a knowledge of British politics and the key concepts and approaches used to explain British politics

Critically evaluate the nature of political change in a political system or with regard to a political issue

Ability to understand and critique political philosophical arguments made by political theorists

An ability to compare different political systems in order to develop a general understanding of the functioning of politics

Plan and carry out a research project relating to a political topic which sustains a line of argument and draws on a body of academic literature

Have developed the historians skills and qualities of mind

Have developed an awareness of continuity and change over an extended time span (Time Depth)

Have understood historical process over an extended period

Have a broad and comparative understanding of the history of more than one society, culture or state (Geographical Range)

Have undertaken close work on primary source material and carry out intensive critical work on such source material (Contemporary Sources)

Reflect critically on the nature of the discipline, its social rationale, its theoretical underpinnings and its intellectual standing (Critical Awareness)

Critically engage with a variety of approaches to history and critically engage with the concepts and methodologies of other disciplines where appropriate (Diversity of Specialisms)

Formulate, execute, and complete an extended piece of writing under appropriate supervision (Extended Writing)

Have acquired a range of core and personal attributes, cognitive, research, practical, and transferable skills (HAHP Core Transferable Skills)

Full-time course composition

YearTermStatusModuleCreditsFHEQ level
4Autumn SemesterOptionAuthoritarianism and its Critics (L2110)306
  Environmental Politics in the Anthropocene (L2111)306
  Global Crisis and European Political Economy (L1998)306
  Political Change: India (L2095)306
  Political Change: Political Parties and Party Systems (L2034)306
  Political Change: The Politics of Euroscepticism (L2055)306
  Political Change: The Rise of Anti-politics (L2083)306
  Political Psychology (L3013)306
  Politics from Below: Cooperation, Conflict and Resistance (L2112)306
 Autumn & Spring TeachingOptionHistory Special Dissertation: The Civil Rights Movement (V1378D)306
  History Special Dissertation: The French Empire (V1433D)306
  History Special Dissertation Britain & the Second World War (V1346D)306
  History Special Dissertation End of Empire (V1353D)306
  History Special Dissertation Israel-US Special Relations and the New Diplomatic History (V1472D)306
  History Special Dissertation Palestine from the Ottomans to Nakba (V1424D)306
  History Special Dissertation Post-Rave Britain (V1460D)306
  Special Subject: Britain and the Second World War (V1346)306
  Special Subject: End of Empire: Nationalism, Decolonisation and the British Raj in India 1937-1950 (V1353)306
  Special Subject: Israel–US Special Relations and the New Diplomatic History (V1472)306
  Special Subject: Palestine from the Ottomans to Nakba (V1424)306
  Special Subject: Post-Rave Britain, 1988 - present (V1460)306
  Special Subject: The Civil Rights Movement (V1378)306
  Special Subject: The French Empire and Its Aftermath (V1433)306
 Spring SemesterOptionImmigration and the Liberal State (L2097)306
  Independent Study/Internship Option (L2021)306
  Parties and Voters in the UK (M1007)306
  Political Corruption (L2046)306
  Populism and Politics (M1535)306
  The Neoliberal Age? Making Sense of Political and Social Change in Modern Britain (L2113)306
  The Politics of (Post-)Truth (L2109)306
  The Politics of Feeling (L2079)306

About your joint honours course

Sussex has always promoted interdisciplinary study by encouraging students to combine different subjects and different approaches to learning. Joint-honours courses are an ideal option if you want to study more than one subject in depth. A key idea behind joint-honours is to experience the range of ways that different academic disciplines use to teach, learn and research. Those differences are stimulating and challenging, but they can also be confusing, so you will find some useful information below to help you get the most out of your course.

  • To find information about the individual modules that make up your course, go to the school that teaches the module. Each module is assessed by the school that teaches it, so on their website you will find (under “student information”) information about the assessment criteria being used, the referencing style you need to use for your work, contact times for your tutors, information about the student reps scheme and lots of other useful information.
  • To find general information about joint honours, use the Frequently Asked Questions list
  • For information about the rules and regulations that govern all Sussex students, start with the general student handbook
  • For help in improving your study skills, using the library and with careers, try the Skills Hub.

And if you have any other questions, contact the convenors for your course; they are here to help you.

Useful links

Please note that the University will use all reasonable endeavours to deliver courses and modules in accordance with the descriptions set out here. However, the University keeps its courses and modules under review with the aim of enhancing quality. Some changes may therefore be made to the form or content of courses or modules shown as part of the normal process of curriculum management.

The University reserves the right to make changes to the contents or methods of delivery of, or to discontinue, merge or combine modules, if such action is reasonably considered necessary by the University. If there are not sufficient student numbers to make a module viable, the University reserves the right to cancel such a module. If the University withdraws or discontinues a module, it will use its reasonable endeavours to provide a suitable alternative module.