Our major in Development Studies offers a comprehensive academic program that uses contemporary social science theories to understand the mechanisms, policies, and practices of development. This field encompasses a wide array of courses that delve into the planning, execution, and repercussions of social, political, and economic transformations. Development Studies scrutinizes the effects of globalization on people across diverse geographical contexts and evaluates concepts like economic viability, democracy, governance, human rights, and environmental sustainability as they apply to culturally distinct contexts. The concept of development, particularly as a state policy and a crucial part of relations between Western industrialized nations and developing countries, gained significance post-World War II with the inception of the IMF/World Bank, and other development banks and aid agencies like USAID and the Australian Development Assistance Bureau. Over time, various theories and approaches to development have emerged, including modernization, dependency, and world system theories from the 60s and 70s, as well as approaches emphasizing empowerment and popular participation through the 90s and 2000s. There is also critical analysis that either challenges the very foundation of development or insists on scrutinizing the networks of social and institutional actors who generate, mobilize, and contest development aid. This major is ideal for students who aspire to a career in development and social justice, and to those who wish to explore critical perspectives on questions of global inequality and transformative change.
Learning Outcomes
- understand the different perspectives and theories of development and change in the modern era;
- apply these perspectives and theories to the practical issues of delivering development programs;
- analyse the competing interests, motivations and discourse of key stakeholders and interest groups; and
- devise and conduct research and write critically about these issues.
Relevant Degrees
Requirements
This major requires the completion of 48 units, which must include:
A minimum of 18 units of 3000-level courses.
The 48 units must include:
12 units from the completion of courses on the following list:
ANTH1003 Anthropology: Critical Foundations (6 units)
POLS1005 Introduction to International Relations: Foundations and Concepts (6 units)
SOCY1002 Self and Society (6 units)
24 units from the completion of the following courses:
ANTH2009 Culture and Development (6 units)
ANTH2129 Crossing Borders: Migration, Identity and Livelihood (6 units)
INTR3001 Humanitarianism: Principles, Politics and Practice (6 units)
SOCY2030 Social Inequalities and Development (6 units)
12 units from the completion of courses on the following list:
ANIP3003 Australian National Internships Program A (6 units)
ANIP3005 Australian National Internships Program B (12 units)
ANTH3018 Unfreedoms: Anthropological Explorations of Oppression, Tyranny and Domination (6 units)
ASIA2067 Asian Economies (6 units)
ASIA2516 Indonesia: Politics, Society and Development (6 units)
ENGN3013 Engineering for a Humanitarian Context (6 units)
ENVS2005 Island Sustainable Development: Fiji Field School (6-12 units)
ENVS2023 Sustainable Agricultural Systems (6 units)
INTR3002 Global Governance in the Asia-Pacific (6 units)
PASI2030 Study Tour: Regional Policymaking for Pacific Development (6 units)
PASI3013 Environment and Development in the Pacific (6 units)
PASI3001 Politics and Development in the Contemporary Pacific (6 units)
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