Undergraduate Courses
  • Students are to follow the requirements of the Handbook for the year they commenced the course.

    However, the subject links below do not contain the subject information for the current year. You can view current subject information through the new Course Handbook.

Politics

The discipline of Politics is an exciting, vibrant and constantly changing body of ideas, approaches and methods. The Politics program offers subjects in international relations, Australian politics, political theory, comparative politics, the politics of developing countries, public policy, culture and media. Students are advised to study as broadly as possible across the areas offered by the discipline.

The purpose of the major is to acquaint students with key areas of Politics as a discipline. Political study involves examining the origins and nature of consent, authority, and consensus, which underpin social order. Many factors are covered in this examination; political institutions, political economy, culture, class, gender and ethnicity. Politics can and does occur at many levels, from international relations to the nation state, from local communities to the individual. The study of politics is not just to do with politics in the here and now, but concerns itself with both the past and the future. Whether it is a country being studied, relations between countries, or a body of political ideas, politics engages us with choices about how to live life and how best to contribute to society.

Major Study

A major in Politics consists of 52 credit points, including at least 24 credit points at 300-level in Politics subjects.

Students majoring in Politics may count up to 16 credit points from the following subjects: PHIL232, PHIL390, STS 300, STS 309. Note: Students enrolled in a double major may only cross-count one subject.

Minor Study

A minor in Politics will consist of at least 28 credit points in subjects with the prefix 'POL' from the Course Structure of the Politics major. Students may not take more than two subjects at 100-level, and may not cross-count any subjects from the minor in any other minor or major study.

Subject Code

Subject Name

Credit Points

Session

100 level

POL 150

Government, Power and Political Systems

6

Autumn/Spring

POL100

The Art of Politics

6

N/O 2014

POL141

Change and Debate in Contemporary Australian Society

6

N/O 2014

200 level

PHIL232

Political Philosophy

8

Spring

POL210

The European Union: Post-war Integration, 1945 to the present

8

N/O 2014

POL211

Democracy in Theory and Practice

8

Autumn

POL213

Key Concepts and Thinkers in Political Theory

8

N/O 2014

POL216

Politics in the USA

8

Autumn

POL220

An Introduction to Peacekeeping

8

Spring

POL222

Australian Public Policy

8

N/O 2014

POL224

Politics and the Media

8

Spring

POL225

International Relations: Issues, Concepts and Theories

8

Autumn

POL290

Women in Society: Productive and Reproductive Labour

8

N/O 2014

300 level

PHIL309

Great Thinkers

8

Autumn

POL301

Politics Internship

8

N/O 2014

POL302

Foundations of Australian Political Culture

8

N/O 2014

POL303

Complex Peace Operations

8

Spring

POL314

Power and the Modern State

8

Spring

POL317

Politics in the South Pacific

8

N/O 2014

POL318

The Politics of Asian Development

8

Autumn

POL319

Political Economy in the New Millennium

8

N/O 2014

POL320

Twentieth Century Dictatorships

8

N/O 2014

POL323

An Unequal World

8

Autumn

POL324

Culture and Politics

8

N/O 2014

POL340

Special Topics in Politics

8

N/O 2014

POL368

Protest and Power in America: The Sixties

8

Spring

STS300

The Environment Context: Imagining a Zero Carbon Future

8

Autumn

STS309

Future Tense: Politics and Regulation of Technoscience

8

Spring

Honours

See Bachelor of Arts Honours

Other Information

Further information is available at:
UOW Course Finder
Email: lha-enquiries@uow.edu.au

Last reviewed: 28 March, 2014