Peace Studies Trinity College Dublin
| Award | Attendance | Study | Duration | Start | Domestic fees | International fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graduate Diploma, MPhil | On-Campus | Full-time | 1 years | find out | find out | find out |
Course overview
Peace Studies examines the problems of war and political violence from the perspectives of international relations, global justice and conflict resolution. It offers to students from different primary disciplines the opportunity for mature reflection on the wide range of issues of peace and conflict, while at the same time affording the opportunity for specialised study through a research dissertation. A particular aim of the programme is to address the wider ethical and philosophical questions that arise through examining peace and war in the context of social sciences.
Students can pursue either a broad-ranging programme in International Peace Studies or specialisations in ‘Ethics in International Affairs’ or ‘Peace-building and Development’, depending on their course selection.
Programme Content
Five courses must be taken. Students are assessed on The Politics of Peace and Conflict and on three other courses, at least one of which must be either International Politics, Ethics in International Affairs, Politics of Development or Conflict Resolution and Nonviolence.
Assessment
The assessment consists of four 5,000-6,000 word essays (or equivalent) to be completed by 1 May, and an 18-20,000 word thesis to be completed by 15 September.
All students are registered on a common Masters programme and follow the same assessment procedures for the four essays required. Subject to satisfactory performance in the four essays, students may proceed to submission of a dissertation for the M.Phil. degree. Students who do not reach that standard, but who nonetheless are judged by the Court of Examiners to have reached a satisfactory level of performance, may be recommended for the award of a postgraduate Diploma, without further assessment.
Students can pursue either a broad-ranging programme in International Peace Studies or specialisations in ‘Ethics in International Affairs’ or ‘Peace-building and Development’, depending on their course selection.
Programme Content
Five courses must be taken. Students are assessed on The Politics of Peace and Conflict and on three other courses, at least one of which must be either International Politics, Ethics in International Affairs, Politics of Development or Conflict Resolution and Nonviolence.
Assessment
The assessment consists of four 5,000-6,000 word essays (or equivalent) to be completed by 1 May, and an 18-20,000 word thesis to be completed by 15 September.
All students are registered on a common Masters programme and follow the same assessment procedures for the four essays required. Subject to satisfactory performance in the four essays, students may proceed to submission of a dissertation for the M.Phil. degree. Students who do not reach that standard, but who nonetheless are judged by the Court of Examiners to have reached a satisfactory level of performance, may be recommended for the award of a postgraduate Diploma, without further assessment.
Entry requirements for this course
Contact Trinity College Dublin to find course entry requirements.
View foundation and pathway programmes to help you meet academic and language entry requirements.
Courses you may be interested in at other institutions
Featured course
University of Klagenfurt
Austria
Cross-Border Studies
MA
On-Campus
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Netherlands
Theology and Religious Studies - Peace, Trauma and Religion
Master Degree
On-Campus
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Netherlands
Theology and Religious Studies: Research
Master Degree
On-Campus
Swansea University
United Kingdom
International Relations and American Studies
BA (Hons)
On-Campus
University of Kent
United Kingdom
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Netherlands
Theology and Religious Studies - Exploring a Discipline
Master Degree
On-Campus
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Netherlands
Theology and Religious Studies - Peace, Trauma and Religion
Master Degree
On-Campus
University of Groningen
Netherlands
Theology and Religious Studies (research)
Master Degree
On-Campus
Foundation Courses
If you are planning to study abroad, but you don't meet the academic entry requirements, consider a foundation or pathway course.
This type of course often helps to bridge the academic gap and help to prepare you for life studying abroad.
Selected courses shown below:
Business Bridging Program
Foundation
On-Campus
University of Kent
United Kingdom
International Foundation Programme
Credit
On-Campus