
MA in
MA Migration and Diaspora Studies and Intensive Language SOAS University of London

Introduction
Mode of Attendance: Full-time or part-time
Our MA in Migration and Diaspora Studies is a broad-based degree for students who want to receive research training in Migration, and Diaspora, as well as Humanitarian and Refugee Studies, including a relevant language as part of the specialisation.
The degree prepares you to proceed to advanced postgraduate research or to work as practitioners in fields related to Migration, Refugees and Humanitarian relief.
This two-year intensive language pathway is directed at students who want to engage with a country in a professional as well as academic way, as the intensive language courses will enable them to reach a near proficient knowledge of the language.
The degree offers students a chance to pursue their specific areas of interest by selecting from optional modules. You will have the option of studying the degree from either:
- A broad-based perspective enhancing your knowledge in light of continuing contemporary research;
- A specific area, allowing you to study diaspora and migration issues in-depth in relation to a particular discipline or region.
The MA in Migration and Diaspora Studies is considerably enriched by the SOAS Centre for Migration and Diaspora Studies, which runs seminars, films and public lectures and also hosts a number of international scholars. The Centre is also a part of a migration research network of London colleges including LSE and UCL. Students on the programme, therefore, have unparalleled access to a critical body of scholars and scholarship on migration and diaspora related issues.
This programme has a first-rate graduate employability record, with graduates moving on to find employment in lectureships and professorships throughout the world in areas such as information and technology, government service, the media and tourism.
Prospective students are encouraged to contact the Programme Convenor, at an early stage of their application to seek advice on the most appropriate options for study.
May be combined with:
The following Intensive Language pathways are available with the MA Migration and Diaspora Studies
- Arabic
- Japanese
- Korean
- Persian
- South-East Asian Languages: Burmese, Indonesian, Thai, Vietnamese
- Swahili
- Turkish
Gallery
Ideal Students
This MA Migration and Diaspora Studies is designed for students who:
- Wish to know more of the transnational nature of the modern world.
- Wish to engage with critical theories to understand the management of mobility and the impact of humanitarian relief.
- Wish to understand the role of migration in the major political and cultural processes of the contemporary world.
- Come from other disciplines, such as Law or Politics, and now wish to incorporate an anthropological perspective on issues of migration and diaspora.
Admissions
Curriculum
Structure
Students must take 315 credits in total, comprised of 255 taught credits (45 of which are taught abroad as part of a Summer School) and a 60-credit dissertation as outlined below.
In their first year, students on the two-year Intensive Language programmes take 60 credits of intensive language instruction and 60 credits in the discipline. During the summer, they participate in a Summer School abroad. In the second year, they take another 30 language credits as well as 60 credits in the discipline; they also complete their dissertation in the discipline.
Students are also required to audit 15PANH002 Ethnographic Research Methods, i.e. to attend lectures for this module (without attending seminars or submitting any assessments). The module does not count towards a total of 315 credits.
Year 1 (two years full time)
Discipline Component
- African and Asian Diasporas in the Contemporary World: Cultures of Resistance and the Dissolution of Boundaries
- African and Asian Diasporas in the Contemporary World: Migration, Space, Identities
- Ethnographic Research Methods
and
Guided Module(s) from any of the lists below, OR modules from the Postgraduate Open Options List, to the value of 30 credits.
and
Language Component
Students take 60 credits in the selected language.
Summer Abroad
Students participate in a Summer School abroad for the selected language.
Year 2 (two years full time)
Discipline Component
Modules from the list of Anthropology & Sociology options below or from the list of options in other departments below to the value of 60 credits.
Language Component
Students take 30 credits in the selected language.
Dissertation
- Dissertation in Anthropology and Sociology
List of Modules (subject to availability)
Anthropology and Sociology
- Anthropology of Development and Sustainability: Global Challenges and Alternative Futures
- Anthropology of Development and Sustainability: History, Politics and Culture
- Anthropology of Food: Diet, Society and Environment
- Anthropology of Food: Politics, Place and Mobility
- Body politics: the anthropology of "race", gender and desire
- Culture and Society of East Africa
- Culture and Society of Near and Middle East
- Ethnographic Research Methods
- From Theory to Practice and Back: Work Placements in Migration Research
- Issues in Anthropology and Climate Change
- Issues in Anthropology and Film
- Issues in Mind, Culture and Psychiatry
- Medical Anthropology: Bodies and Cultures
- Medical Anthropology: Global Perspectives
Modules in Other Department
- Borders and Development
- Civil society, social movements and the development process
- Queering Migrations and Diasporas
- Indian Cinema: Its History and Social Context
- Indian Cinema: Key Issues
- International migration and diaspora politics
- Issues in Forced Migration
- Migration and Development
- Migration and Policy
- Modern Film from Taiwan and the Chinese Diaspora (PG)
- Music, Place and Politics in Cuba
- Postcolonial Theory and Practice
- Race and Caste
- Transnational Communities and Diasporic Media: Networking, Connectivity, Identity
- Labour, Activism and Global Development
- Law and Postcolonial Theory
- Political Theory, Race and Empire
- Labour, Activism and Global Development
- White Supremacy and African Resistance in Colonial Southern Africa
Important notice
The information on the programme page reflects the intended programme structure against the given academic session.
Career Opportunities
Employment
A Masters in Migration and Diaspora Studies helps you to understand the world, other peoples’ ways of life and how society is organised.
This programme will endow you with a specialist understanding of producers, audiences, and other cultural and social aspects of mass media. Over the years the SOAS department has trained numerous leading anthropologists who have gone on to occupy lectureships and professorships throughout the world. Equally, students gain skills during their degree that transfer well to areas such as information and technology, government service, the media and tourism.
Postgraduate students leave SOAS with a portfolio of widely transferable skills which employers seek, including analytical and critical skills; ability to gather, assess and interpret data; high level of cultural awareness; and problem-solving.
A postgraduate degree is a valuable experience that provides students with a body of work and a diverse range of skills that they can use to market themselves with when they graduate.
English Language Requirements
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