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International Relations, BA (Hons), with industry placement

Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom

 
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Subject ranking

Overall
UK / Times 2025
42nd
Overall
UK / CUG 2026
46th
Politics
UK / CUG 2026
47th

Costs

Course feesS$28.3K / year
Entertainment, books
food & rent
S$17.2K / year
Beer S$7
MacDonalds S$10
Cinema S$17
Coffee S$5
TotalS$45.5K / year

Entry requirements

A Level BCC
Diploma 2.6
International Baccalaureate 31

Scholarships

NTU Excellence Scholarships
Up to 50% for tuition
Limited quantity
NTU International Scholarships
£3000 for tuition
Limited quantity
British Chevening Scholarships
100% for tuition and living expenses
Limited quantity

Information

Course
Code
L259
Upcoming
Intakes
Sep 2025
Course
Website (External)
Pathway
Programmes
See pathways
University
Information
WHATSAPP
+65 9650 3225
HOTLINE
+65 6333 1300

Duration

4 years
Graduate
2029
About the course

In an increasingly interconnected world, International Relations (IR) at NTU addresses global challenges like conflict, climate change, and inequality, while navigating political divisions. The programme emphasizes personalization from the outset, allowing students to tailor their studies to interests such as terrorism, pop culture, or regional focuses like Africa and Latin America. It culminates in a supported dissertation, fostering expertise through innovative teaching and transferable skills for careers in diplomacy, media, NGOs, and beyond.Studying IR at NTU in vibrant Nottingham offers real-world projects, digital skills development, and optional placements or study abroad. Students can learn languages like Arabic or Mandarin and explore modules on global governance, postcolonial politics, and environmental policy. Assessment includes essays, presentations, and a final dissertation, with feedback provided within three weeks.

What you will learn

There’s no denying that the 21st Century world is a complex place. We’ve all lived through a global pandemic that transformed everyday life, and we are now seeing a period of war in Europe, secessionist movements in Africa, sectarianism in the Middle East, populism in Latin America, and economic crisis in Asia. It’s a time of almost unprecedented flux and upheaval, but it’s also an urgent and exhilarating time to be studying international relations. IR can be about the very big things happening in the world — the impact of the war in Ukraine on the global economy; the migratory flows stemming from the conflict in Syria; the rising powers of Asia; the decline of the United States; or the crisis of the European Union — but it can also be about our everyday lives: from the clothes you wear and the music you listen to, to the components of the mobile phone in your pocket. All these things establish international relationships with people around the world. That’s why IR@NTU is about seeing the world differently. It’s about identifying the connections, understanding the conflicts, viewing issues from different perspectives, and asking fundamental questions. We’ll dare you to be different, whether that’s in the classroom, out on placement, studying abroad, taking part in our huge range of student-led political clubs and societies, or even by learning a brand-new language. Ultimately, you’ll customise your own degree to reflect your own interests, designing your dissertation to explore in-depth a topic that you are personally passionate about. Your IR@NTU degree puts you at the centre of this complex and tumultuous world. Here’s a breakdown of the core and optional modules you’ll be studying across your course: Year One modules include Study and Research Skills, Politics and International Relations in Practice, An Introduction to International Relations, International Relations and Global History, UN and Global Governance and Media Power and Truth. Year Two modules Careers and Experience in Politics and International Relations, Social Research and Global Political Economy of Everyday Life. Optional modules include Security Studies, Global Politics of Post Colonialism, Environmental Politics and Policy, The Politics of Art, Film and Literature, Understanding Foreign Policy and Foreign Language. You may choose to take an optional year-long placement in Year Three, either in the UK or overseas. You will be supported by our experienced Employability Team to source a suitable placement. Final year modules include a Dissertation, Leadership, Activism and Campaigning. Optional modules include Negotiating in International Contexts, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean in World Politics, Feminist Thought and Praxis, Globalisation in Crisis, Global Politics of Pop Culture, The International Relations of the Middle East and North Africa, East of the West: Eurasian Geopolitics, Political Violence & Terror and Emerging Powers of Asia.

A local representative of Nottingham Trent University in Singapore is available online to assist you with enquiries about this course.