Our programme is a disciplinary degree that focuses on the region for its case studies and offers strong disciplinary expertise combined with genuine regional expertise.
East Asia’s emergence as the most dynamic region in the global political economy continues despite a series of economic and security crises since the early 1990s. If anything, the crises reinvigorated the study of the international relations and political economy of East Asia. Instead of just focusing on economic growth, the crises highlighted key actors’ interests and historical and ideational factors behind them, the impact of globalisation on the region and existing development paradigms, US-China great power competition, and the need for greater regional cooperation to cope with future security and economic risks.
Core modules
International Relations of the Asia-Pacific
The module analyses the characteristics and patterns of international politics in Pacific-Asia by focussing on the central theme of the degree to which the region can be perceived to function as a coherent and integrated entity. The module investigates this theme though addressing questions of common and competing understandings of the location and division of the region in terms of geography, modes of political, economic and security interaction, ‘Asian identity’ and culture. In short, the module seeks to address the problem of ‘what’ exactly can be thought to have constituted the Pacific-Asia region in the past and in the contemporary era.
Optional modules
Optional modules can vary from year to year. Example optional modules may include:
- East Asian Development Policies
- The Nuclear Question
- Comparing Rising World Powers