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Middle East Politics and Security

Undergraduate | MUR-POL334 | 2020

Course information for 2020 intake View information for 2024 course intake

Register the way social and cultural trends impact Middle East politics and security. Map the events that formed the region's modern states. Follow the rise of religious radicalism. Address the War on Terror and the demonstrations of the Arab Spring.

Study method
100% online
Assessments
Subject may require attendance
Entry requirements
No ATAR needed,
No prior study
Duration
13 weeks

HECS-HELP and FEE-HELP available

Middle East Politics and Security

About this subject

  • This subject aims to achieve the following specific learning outcomes:

    1. Knowledge:  Students will learn important moments, events and ideas relating to the development of modern Middle East politics and security issues.  
    2. Comprehension:  They will understand how these relate to underlying cultural, social, and religious trends in the region and to broader forces such as imperialism, conflict, and radicalism.  
    3. Analysis:  They will be able to judge whether these trends and forces make the Middle East unique or exceptional.  
    4. Argument: They will be able to construct arguments that both draw on specific historical and contemporary examples and evaluate differing perspectives on key Middle Eastern issues relating to politics and security.

    This subject also aims to achieve the following generic learning outcomes:

    1. Prioritising material:  Students will learn how to manage a large amount of empirical material and order it in a comprehensible manner.
    2. Synthesis:  Students will be able to draw on the material presented in lectures and the readings to make connections and draw conclusions.  
    3. Critical thinking:  Students will learn how to look at contested interpretations of history, culture, politics and security and to evaluate their strengths and weaknesses.  
    4. Communication:  Through tutorials and essays, students will learn how to present their ideas, both verbally and in writing, in a structured and clear way.

Entry requirements

No entry requirements

Study load

0.125 EFTSL
This is in the range of 10 to 12 hours of study each week.

Equivalent full time study load (EFTSL) is one way to calculate your study load. One (1.0) EFTSL is equivalent to a full-time study load for one year.

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