The course poses a series of questions centred around the following issues: the predicted rise of china and India and whether not this poses a fundamental challenge to the west-dominated international order; whether this requires a revisiting of dominant theories of international relations (IR); how domestic issues of multiculturalism and immigration have become internationalised (if at all); how religion, race, gender, ethnicity, culture and other identity related issues impact upon international relations and in turn get affected by it; whether conventional theories suffice or the emergence of global change require different conceptual tools (to explain and understand the global order); this new course will engage with conventional and post-colonial theories that enable a critical analysis of the global change brought on by the predicted rise of the non-west; it will also enable a comparative and in-depth understanding of key features of the domestic and international politics of the emerging Asian giants (China and India).
Our courses are taught across four London campuses – three in central London and all within walking distance of each other, and a fourth in Harrow, north-west London, which is just a 30-minute tube ride away from central London.
Cavendish Campus
Our Cavendish Campus is in central London – just a 5-minute walk from Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road.
Subjects taught at the campus include Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Computer Science and Engineering, and Psychology.
Harrow Campus
Our Harrow Campus is based in north-west London, just 30 minutes away from central London by tube.
Subjects taught at the campus include Art and Design, Fashion, and Film and Television.
Marylebone Campus
Our Marylebone Campus is in central London, within easy walking distance of both Regent's Park and Marylebone High Street.
Subjects taught at the campus include Accounting and Finance, Business and Management, and Construction Management and Urban Planning.
Regent Campus
Our Regent Campus comprises three sites in central London, all within a few minutes' walk of Oxford Street:
309 Regent Street – subjects taught at this site include English and Creative Writing, Languages, and History.
Little Titchfield Street – our Law courses are taught here.
Wells Street – Criminology and Sociology, and Politics and International Relations are taught here.
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