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GRADUATE POLITICS DEGREES


To study politics at graduate level is to engage with some of the most pressing issues of the day. Read our guide to find out more.


From the beginnings of democracy in the city states of Ancient Greece, to the extreme ideological stances of the 20th century and the modern world’s late capitalist consensus, politics has continued to fascinate us. Some of the world’s greatest minds have grappled with the subject, among them can be found the various ‘fathers of political science’: Aristotle, Niccolò Machiavelli and Charles-Louis de Secondat.


Today, the study of politics can be as varied and complex as


the intrigues of policy making themselves. “Politics, as a subject, encompasses an extremely wide range of topics,” reflects Professor


Alan Hamlin, head of politics at the University of Manchester, “including international relations, alternative political systems and institutions, the politics of particular countries and regions, the analysis of policy, and political philosophy. It also includes a wide variety of different approaches to each of these areas.”


Professor Hamlin goes on to explain the intrinsic value of studying politics. “Political forces affect us all and shape the world we live in. Studying those forces, and their inter-connections, helps us to understand the world and to think about our role in it. While there is great debate and


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