• Total units 48 Units
  • Areas of interest International Relations, Political Sciences
  • Major code IREL-MAJ

International Relations (IR) is the study of relationships, interactions, and institutions that involve power, rule, or authority and take place across national borders. The IR major provides an overview of the field’s historical and intellectual background and an understanding of contemporary debates across many dimensions – cultural, economic, environmental, military, and beyond. Students gain exposure to policy analysis, critical thinking and data literacy, and select specialised IR topics like terrorism, empire, and human rights to name a few. Our flexible program offers many additional options, including language study, going on exchange or doing an international/national internship.

Learning Outcomes

  1. demonstrate knowledge of the international system's historical development and contemporary status, and of its key theories and concepts;
  2. demonstrate more specialised theoretical, methodological, or historical/case knowledge; apply that knowledge to the study of international phenomena;
  3. apply the key theories and concepts of international relations to historical cases and contemporary issues; reflect on the utility and explanatory power of those theories and concepts; and
  4. communicate and debate both orally and in writing, and work with others, using various media.
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Requirements

The International Relations major requires the completion of 48 units, of which: 

A maximum of 12 units may come from the completion of 1000-level courses; and 

A minimum of 18 units must come from the completion of 3000-level courses.


The 48 units must consist of:

6 units from the completion of:

POLS1005 Introduction to International Relations

 

18 units from the completion of courses from the following International Relations Sub-field list:

POLS2017 International Relations Theory

POLS2094 International Political Economy

POLS2132 War and International Relations

POLS2133 Global Cooperation and Institutions


6 units from the completion of any 1000 or 2000 level POLS-coded course, or a course from the following International Relations and Social Science Enquiry list:

ASIA2093 Natural Resource Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific

ASIA2301 Human Migration and Expansion in the Rise of the Asia-Pacific

DEMO2003 Migration in the Modern World

HIST2136 World at War, 1939-1945

HIST2141 The Cold War: 1945-1989

HIST2214 The Great War: The Conflict that Changed the World

INTR2010 International Relations in the Asia-Pacific

MEAS2105 The Political Economy of the Middle East

SOCR1001 Foundations of Social Research

STAT1003 Statistical Techniques

STST2001 Security Concepts in the Asia-Pacific


18 units from the completion the following list, of which 12 units must come from the completion of POLS-coded courses:

ENVS3033 International Environmental Policy

INTR3001 Humanitarianism: Principles, Politics, Practice

INTR3002 Global Institutions in the Asia-Pacific

MEAS3009 Modern Arabian Peninsula: Society, Politics and Security

PASI3013 Environment and Development in the Pacific

POLS3001 Foreign Policy

POLS3032 The Politics of Empire

POLS3035 Norms and International Law in World Politics

POLS3036 Terrorism

POLS3113 Human Rights

POLS3136 Power and Influence in World Politics

SOCR3001 Data for Decision Making

STST3002 Australia’s Security in the Asian Century

STST3003 Honeypots and Overcoats: Australian Intelligence in the World

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