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More than 180 courses in over 42 countries, and counting...
 
Course Directory
Course Directory > Postgraduate (taught)
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MSc Cooperation and Development
(Institute for Advanced Study of Pavia - IUSS)

Training Provider: Institute for Advanced Study of Pavia (IUSS)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Cooperation and Development School of Pavia
The Master Program in Cooperation and Development (CD) aims at training professionals in the field of international cooperation. Students are prepared to work in institutions which operate in the area of cooperation and development, such as International Organizations, Governmental Bureaus, firms working in Developing Countries, Public Institutions, Non-Governmental Organizations, and other no-profit organizations.

The Master lasts 15 months, beginning on November 2007 and ending on January 2009. It is a full time Master Program which includes a residential period of class work in Pavia – from November to June – and an internship period which will take place between July and December. The residential part of the curriculum foresees 600 hours of class and 180 hours of workshops and tutorials.
The Master degree will be awarded to successful students in January 2009.

Deadline for applications:
- June 30 for foreign citizens
- September 30 for italian citizens


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MSc Development Administration and Planning
(University College London)

Training Provider: University College London (UCL)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Development Planning Unit (DPU)
The course is strongly interdisciplinary, attracting among others anthropologists, geographers, lawyers, public administrators, economists and politicians. Since the course’s beginnings in the DPU in the mid-1990s, course graduates have engaged in a diversity of professional activities, including local, regional and national government, consultancy firms and national and international NGOs, United Nations programmes, international aid agencies and prestigious universities the world over.

Many graduates return to their previous jobs and others embark on new careers after the course. Examples of organisations where recent graduates are employed include: Asian Development Bank; American Refugee Committee; Canon Collins Trust for Southern Africa; Christian Aid (UK and West Africa); Heifer International; International Institute for Environment and Development (UK); Medical Research Council HIV/AIDS Programme (Uganda); North-West Frontier Province (Pakistan) Finance Department; Save the Children; UNESCO; United Nations Economic Commission for Africa; United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East; World Vision (Zambia); and international consultancy firms such as PADECO (Japan) and Halcrow (UK). A small proportion of graduates pursue advanced research degrees (e.g. PhDs), while several work as academics in reputed universities or as independent consultants.

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MSc Development Studies
(School of Oriental & African Studies)

Training Provider: School of Oriental & African Studies (SOAS)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Development Studies
Development Studies is a dynamic field concerned with processes of change in the South - social and economic, political and cultural - and the major policy challenges they present to efforts to overcome poverty and insecurity in the world today.

This MSc is designed to provide a solid interdisciplinary social science formation in development theory and practice and to develop students’ capacities for independent and critical analysis.

The aim is to equip students with a wide intellectual grounding and interdisciplinary competence in development issues. This will enable them to make their own analyses and judgements in developmental contexts, and in relation to developmental interventions.

This emphasis on transferable analytical skills has been of great benefit to the many graduates of the MSc programmes at SOAS who have returned to, or taken up, professional careers in development in international organisations, government agencies and non-government organisations.

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MSc Economics (Development )(Department of Economics, University of Bath)
Training Provider: University of Bath
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Economics
The programme is designed for those students who either already have, or who wish to pursue, careers as: economists in general and those seeking an academic career; staff of international organisations and national governments working in economic analysis and policy roles, and; economists or managers in private sector business organisations (including the financial services sector).

This specialist MSc in Economics:
  • Combines the academic study of theoretical and quantitative economics as in a conventional economics masters programme with a development specialism
  • Provides an opportunity to produce a substantial dissertation on a research topic of your choice  


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MSc Environment and Sustainable Development
(University College London)

Training Provider: University College London (UCL)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Development Planning Unit (DPU)
The course is strongly interdisciplinary, attracting participants from a wide variety of disciplines, including anthropologists, economists, geographers and natural scientists, as well as planners, architects and engineers. Since its inception in 1997, over 100 students have successfully completed the ESD course. Most ESD graduates follow one of two possible career paths. Some are engaged in various professional activities, from local and national government, consultancy firms and national and international NGOs, to United Nations programmes and international aid agencies the world over. Others pursue an academic career, either through doctoral studies or through teaching and research in a number of prestigious universities.

Examples of organisations where ESD graduates are currently working include: Ministry of the Environment (Brazil), Development Alternatives (India), Waste Management System (Costa Rica), World Bank, British High Commission (Ghana), Friends of the Earth (Japan), London Environment Council (UK) and University of Coimbra (Portugal).

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MSc Globalisation and Development (IDPM University of Manchester)
Training Provider: University of Manchester
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Institute for Development Policy and Management (IDPM)
The multi-faceted economic, social and political processes for which ‘globalisation’ is now the shorthand have transformed relations between and within all countries and present new challenges for achieving sustainable development in the poorer countries of the world. The dramatic growth in cross-border flows of trade and investment, combined with the communications revolution, has affected fundamentally the ways in which ’developed’ and ‘developing’ countries relate to each other. While offering new opportunities for raising living standards worldwide, globalisation also seems to have compounded experiences of uneven development. These changes are of sufficient significance to require a fundamental shift in our analytical and policy approaches to achieving national and international development goals. The objectives of the programme are:
  • To provide a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of globalisation, and of the economic, social and political dimensions of globalisation and development

  • To provide the intellectual skills needed to analyse globalisation and development issues

  • To provide an appreciation of the policy issues associated with globalisation and its impacts on development


MSc Globalisation and International Policy Analysis (Department of Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath)
Training Provider: University of Bath
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Economics
Recognising the inter-desciplianrity of the subject, the MSc Globalisation & International Policy Analysis is delivered jointly by the Dept. of Economics & International Development and the Dept. of Social & Policy Sciences at the University of Bath.

The aims of the programme are:

  • To review systematically, and to evaluate critically the literature on the causes of globalisation and the impacts of globalisation on international policymaking from the perspective of different social sciences and schools of thought.
  • To demonstrate a critical understanding of the institutional and policy environment within which governments, business and other actors are shaping the global system.
  • Analyse the policy choices and conflicts with which these actors are presenting each other and the issues of public and private responsibility which these raise.
  • To relate alternative theories of globalisation and policy making to students' own experience, enabling them to bring to bare a wider range of ideas and perspectives.
  • To review in more depth the globalisation and international policymaking literature in specialist areas/fields of students' own choosing.
  • To enable students to identify, research and develop their own original arguments in specialist areas of international policymaking of their own choosing.
  • Develop practical skills of policy analysis and evaluation (learning by doing).
  • To enable students to identify and pursue in depth an original research question relating to some aspect of globalisation and/or international policy making of their own choosing.
The multidisciplinary and widely overarching nature of this programme leads to opportunities for employment in a wide variety of fields such as international organisations, national governmental and non-governmental organisations, research institutions. It is also an ideal grounding for Doctoral research.


MSc International Development - MID (Department of Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath)
Training Provider: University of Bath
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Economics
The Aims of the MSc International Development are:

  • To review systematically, and to evaluate critically different ways of defining and measuring development and underdevelopment.
  • To review systematically, and to evaluate critically explanations of development and underdevelopment from the perspective of different social sciences and schools of thought.
  • To relate different theories of development to students' own experience, enabling them to bring to bear a wider range of ideas and perspectives on development issues and problems.
  • To review systematically and critically the literature on contemporary issues in development.
  • To review in more depth the development literature in specialist areas/fields of students' own choosing.
  • To enable students to identify, research and develop their own original arguments in specialist areas of development of their own choosing.
  • To enable students to identify and pursue in depth an original research question relating to some aspect of development of their own choosing.

The programme was designed for those students either already with a career in international development, or who wish to develop such a career.

Many past students have continued their career within the government or non-government organisation that sponsored their study and from which they came. Others have secured paid employment with a UK-based or international development agency for the first time. Recent "first time" employers include: Action Aid, Oxfam, Tear Fund, UK Department for International Development, Swedish International Development Agency, Food and Agriculture Organisation. Although graduates have historically been more likely to join non-profit agencies, a growing number subsequently work as private consultants. There is also an established tradition of students proceeding from the MSc programme onto MPhil/PhD programmes and academic careers.

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MSc NGOs and Development (London School of Economics & Political Science)
Training Provider: London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Social Policy
The programme examines the special roles of NGOs and the challenges they encounter, their relationships with other stakeholders (states, inter-governmental organisations, beneficiaries), the internal organisational challenges as well as the changing policy contexts in which NGOs operate.

The Centre established this innovative programme - to our knowledge, the first of its kind anywhere in the world - in 1995. It is intended for people who are making, or who have the potential to make, a significant contribution to the non-governmental sector in the developing world as analysts, policy-makers, researchers or practitioners.
 
Applicants will be expected to be well-qualified graduates with at least some experience of work within  NGOs and/or relevant government departments or donor agencies working with NGOs. During the past, we have had a wide range of students at different stages of their careers. These range from mid-career professionals seeking to supplement their field or office experience with a period of reflection and study, to younger people with limited practical experience who are just starting out, but who plan to build their future working in or with the non-governmental sector.

Our students tend to be drawn from all corners of the world - countries represented on the course so far include Afghanistan, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Barbados, Brazil, Britain, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, France, Gambia, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Jamaica, Japan, Kenya, Korea, Lebanon, Lesotho, Lithuania, Madagascar, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Vietnam, and USA.

Some students have come from large well-known NGOs such as Action Aid, Care, Red Cross or Oxfam but many are people who are working in small local organisations. Not all of our students are necessarily actually working in NGOs - we have also sometimes had people who are part of government or inter-governmental organisations but who work with the NGO sector, or from people who are working as consultants with NGOs.

Applications to the MSc from prospective students from developing and transition countries are particularly welcomed.


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MSc Social Development Practice
(University College London)

Training Provider: University College London (UCL)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Development Planning Unit (DPU)
The course attracts participants from a wide variety of disciplines including sociology, anthropology, international studies, history, communication studies, geography and psychology. The course first ran in 1999 and applications have come from a total of 29 countries. Graduates of the course are now working in a number of professional capacities some of which include: programme officer for an international NGO (Dhaka); NGO officers (Indonesia, UK); advisor/ trainer for a women's human rights group (Croatia); consultants working in both British and overseas companies and government institutions and UK local government officers.

The course seeks to equip participants to work as social development practitioners. It is intended to develop participants’ critical, analytical and practical skills that will be of use in their future careers whether as academics, social development practitioners or advocates for the need to place the 'social' at the centre of development. Accordingly it provides participants with the opportunity to critically examine relevant bodies of knowledge, current debates and experience from the field and invites them to consider how social development concerns can be effectively addressed in the processes of development policy, planning and practice. It focuses on international contexts of development in order to better illustrate the complexities underlying social development planning and the potential pitfalls when attempting to effect social change initiatives.

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MSc Social Policy and Development (London School of Economics & Political Science)
Training Provider: London School of Economics & Political Science (LSE)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Social Policy

This programme is aimed primarily at participants from or working in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the post-communist societies. Currently about two thirds of students come from these regions and in a typical year we have representatives from 25 or more different countries. Some course participants are development professionals from central planning ministries and sectoral social service ministries such as education, rural development, housing, social security and social work services, while others are drawn from northern and southern non-governmental development organisations (NGOs) such as Oxfam, Action Aid, Christian Aid, Médecins sans Frontières and Save the Children Fund. We also have students who are representatives of multilateral aid bodies such as the World Bank, UNDP, UNEP, UNICEF, UNHCR, the WHO, ILO and IPPF. The course is also suitable for development policy researchers in institutions of higher education and think tanks.

 



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MSc Urban Development Planning
(University College London)

Training Provider: University College London (UCL)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Development Planning Unit (DPU)
The central focus of the course is international practices in urban development policy, planning and management addressing spatial, socio-economic and political transformation in Africa, Asia, Middle East and Latin America. The objective of the course is to give participants an understanding of the processes that generate urban change, and to enhance their diagnostic and strategic capacities to respond to such change within the framework of socially just urban governance.

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MSc Urban Economic Development
(University College London)

Training Provider: University College London (UCL)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Development Planning Unit (DPU)
The course is aimed at economists, or those who wish to work as economists, who are either currently working in, or intend to work in multilateral or bilateral aid agencies, government agencies, private companies or non-governmental organisations, universities and research institutes concerned with formulating and/or implementing economic policies related to the urban sector or particular cities. Examples of organisations with which recent graduates of the UED course have jobs include: Thames Gateway London Partnership, Japan Bank for International Cooperation (Japan); Shanghai World Expo Group, China (China); Technical University of Lisbon (Portugal); The Deputy Prime Minister’s Office (UK); Ministry of Planning (Argentina).


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MSc Wellbeing & Human Development (Department of Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath)
Training Provider: University of Bath
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Economics
This programme is aimed at:

  • recent graduates who are interested in poverty, both globally and in the UK, and international issues and who are seeking a deeper conceptual and ethical understanding of this new discourse than is offered by conventional courses in ‘development studies’;

  • professionals working in development policy and practice for whom the discourse of well-being is becoming increasingly relevant, and who would like to deepen their understanding of human wellbeing from an interdisciplinary perspective and with a strong policy focus.

The programme aims to:

  • To provide a systematic understanding of the theories and concepts underlying the discourses of wellbeing and human development.

  • To review systematically and critically the literature on contemporary issues in wellbeing and human development.

  • To critically evaluate public policy from the perspective of human wellbeing.

  • To analyze critically and rigorously the ethical underpinnings of development policy and practice.

  • To enable students to identify and pursue their own research questions, and research and develop original arguments in specialist areas of their choosing.

  • To develop critical skills to draw policy implications from research.

For more information see http://www.bath.ac.uk/soc-pol/postgraduate/mid/



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MSc/Diploma in Economics, Banking and Finance (University of Glasgow)
Training Provider: University of Glasgow
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Centre for Development Studies (CDS)
The programme of study leading to the degree of MSc in Economics, Banking and Finance is designed for:
 
1. policy-makers in government ministries and developing countries’ central banks;
2. postgraduate students who are interested in issues of particular concern to developing countries;
3. those who work in financial institutions and government organisations involved in decision making.
 
The programme is designed for those wishing to enter, or who are already in, professions which require employees to be able to provide economic analysis of financial and banking issues.
 
The Diploma in Economics, Banking and Finance places less emphasis on research training than does the MSc programme, but will, nonetheless, provide a thorough grounding in the policy issues and techniques of analysis in this area, and will be appropriate for a range of career options in banking and international finance.



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