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Universität Leipzig
Master Englisch Sozialwissenschaften

European Master's in Global Studies

Master

Über das Programm

This international research-based Master's programme combines perspectives, methods, and theories developed in history, the social sciences, cultural and area studies, and economics to investigate phenomena of global connectedness. We do not believe that globalisation exists as an objectively given material reality that can be measured, but rather that we have to understand the phenomena described as globalisation as a bundle of political, economic, social and cultural projects to manage increasing transnational and transcontinental connectedness (the so-called global condition). Therefore, the multi-national classroom of the programme and the cross-over of contributions from various disciplines and universities dealing either with some of these projects and/or with their conflicts and resulting entanglements offer substantial added value to the study of processes of globalisation. The learning targets of the programme are: to become familiar with different academic ways of looking at processes of globalisation to learn about how concepts of globalisation worked in the past and work today in various world regions to work with concepts from different analytical and theoretical perspectives to systematically compare socio-political concepts and configurations as well as to investigate their mutual interaction (cultural transfers) to gain insight into the production of social science knowledge and to relate knowledge production to concepts of globalisation to become aware of one's own rootedness in a specific discipline and academic culture Since we start out with the assumption that there is no single discipline that is able to cover the whole set of phenomena summarised under the term globalisation, the programme favours a post-disciplinary organisation of knowledge production by giving precedence to comparative approaches (both diachronic and geographic), encompassing constructivist approaches, and questioning essentialist notions. Taking the postcolonial challenge seriously, we would argue that the current disciplinary organisation of universities (which we nevertheless have to deal with) is often inadequate for the production of knowledge about the current world and that we have to reflect upon this inadequacy to overcome it at least partly.
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This international research-based Master's programme combines perspectives, methods, and theories developed in history, the social sciences, cultural and area studies, and economics to investigate phenomena of global connectedness. We do not believe that globalisation exists as an objectively given material reality that can be measured, but rather that we have to understand the phenomena described as globalisation as a bundle of political, economic, social and cultural projects to manage increasing transnational and transcontinental connectedness (the so-called global condition). Therefore, the multi-national classroom of the programme and the cross-over of contributions from various disciplines and universities dealing either with some of these projects and/or with their conflicts and resulting entanglements offer substantial added value to the study of processes of globalisation. The learning targets of the programme are: to become familiar with different academic ways of looking at processes of globalisation to learn about how concepts of globalisation worked in the past and work today in various world regions to work with concepts from different analytical and theoretical perspectives to systematically compare socio-political concepts and configurations as well as to investigate their mutual interaction (cultural transfers) to gain insight into the production of social science knowledge and to relate knowledge production to concepts of globalisation to become aware of one's own rootedness in a specific discipline and academic culture Since we start out with the assumption that there is no single discipline that is able to cover the whole set of phenomena summarised under the term globalisation, the programme favours a post-disciplinary organisation of knowledge production by giving precedence to comparative approaches (both diachronic and geographic), encompassing constructivist approaches, and questioning essentialist notions. Taking the postcolonial challenge seriously, we would argue that the current disciplinary organisation of universities (which we nevertheless have to deal with) is often inadequate for the production of knowledge about the current world and that we have to reflect upon this inadequacy to overcome it at least partly.

Welche Berufe eröffnet dieses Programm?

Verwandte Berufssuchen aus Daten der Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BERUFENET):

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Fächer / Themenbereiche

International Relations

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Kurze Antworten zu European Master's in Global Studies an der Universität Leipzig

Wird European Master's in Global Studies an der Universität Leipzig auf Deutsch oder Englisch unterrichtet?

Dieser Master Studiengang wird in Englisch unterrichtet. Stelle sicher, dass du die Sprachanforderungen (z.B. TestDaF, DSH, IELTS oder TOEFL) vor der Bewerbung überprüfst.

Wie viel kostet der Studiengang European Master's in Global Studies?

1.150 EUR / Semester. Internationale Studierende sollten zusätzlich etwa 800–1000 EUR/Monat für Lebenshaltungskosten in Deutschland einplanen.

Was sind die Zulassungsvoraussetzungen für European Master's in Global Studies an der Universität Leipzig?

Typische Anforderungen sind: ein anerkannter Sekundar-/Bachelorabschluss, Nachweis der Sprachkenntnisse (Englisch) und (für Nicht-EU-Bewerber) eine uni-assist Bewerbung plus Finanzierungsnachweis (Sperrkonto ~11.904 EUR/Jahr).

Wann ist die Bewerbungsfrist?

Die Bewerbungsfristen variieren: Das Wintersemester endet in der Regel am 15. Juli, das Sommersemester am 15. Januar. Bestätige die genaue Frist immer auf der offiziellen Universitätswebsite.

Kann ich während des Studiums von European Master's in Global Studies in Deutschland arbeiten?

Ja. Internationale Studierende dürfen ohne zusätzliche Genehmigung bis zu 140 volle Tage / 280 halbe Tage pro Jahr arbeiten. Nach dem Abschluss kannst du eine 18-monatige Arbeitserlaubnis zur Jobsuche beantragen.

Wie bewerbe ich mich an der Universität Leipzig — direkt oder über uni-assist?

Die meisten deutschen Universitäten akzeptieren internationale Bewerbungen zur Dokumentenprüfung über uni-assist. Einige Universitäten akzeptieren Direktbewerbungen — überprüfe die Programmseite auf der offiziellen Website.

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