| Program start date | Application deadline |
| 2025-09-01 | - |
Program Overview
MA Anthropology Programme
Overview
The MA Anthropology programme at University College Cork is an innovative and unique programme that fills a large gap in the Irish higher education landscape. Anthropology is uniquely well-placed to provide an analysis of our contemporary local and global situation, and this programme offers the increasing number of international students with personal lived experience of migration, immigration, and globalisation, conflict, and war, a vehicle with which to voice their own thoughts and experiences to an academic standard.
Course Outline
Our MA Anthropology programme represents state-of-the-art in-field training in ethnography, combined with cultural, political, and social theory. Bringing together the knowledge and skills of staff at the Marginalized and Endangered Worldviews Study Centre and the Economy and Society Research Centre, the programme is taught through students' active participation in international summer schools and colloquia, as well as classroom seminars, and with practical fieldwork opportunities in Latin America, India, and several sites throughout Europe, including Ireland.
We offer our students a unique opportunity to gain intercultural competencies as well as professional and transferable skills. It will appeal to those of you with a strong international and intellectual outlook who seek a deeper understanding of the cultural, political, and social challenges of the 21st Century.
Modules
Part I (Full-time) (60 credits)
- Students complete core modules to the value of 30 credits and select 30 credits from the elective modules.
- Our students are strongly encouraged to attend one of the Summer/Winter Schools and can take up to 10 credits from those on offer in a given year.
Core Modules
- AY6013 Anthropology: Paradigms and Theories (10 credits)
- AY6015 Ethnography, Practice, and Writing (10 credits)
- AY6016 Rereading the Anthropological Classics (10 credits)
Summer School/Winter School Elective Modules
- AY6017 Atlantic Anthropological Workshop (10 credits)
- SC6001 Economy and Society Summer School (5 credits)
- SC6002 Economy and Society Summer School 2 (10 credits)
Standard Elective Modules
- AY3002 Dark Heritage: Anthropology of Death, War, and Difficult Pasts (5 credits)
- AY3003 Semiotics and Anthropology (5 credits)
- AY6004 Anthropology and Social Control (10 credits)
- AY6025 Anthropology and Aesthetics of Performance: Ritual and Theatre (10 credits)
- GV6115 European Security (10 credits)
- LW6544 Criminology: Core Theories, Context, and Critique (10 credits)
- MU6042 Ethnography of Music (10 credits)
- MU6043 History and Theory of Ethnomusicology (10 credits)
- SC6631 Sociology of Sustainable Development (10 credits)
- SC6639 Feminist Epistemologies: Feminisms, Sexuality, and Society (10 credits)
- SC6642 Social Theory and Climate Justice (10 credits)
- SC6644 Im/mobilities: forced migration and belonging (10 credits)
- SC6643 Sociology of Science, Technology, and Medicine (10 Credits)
- SC6645 Alcohol and Society: Use, Regulation, and Harms (10 credits)
Part II (30 credits)
- AY6003 Dissertation (30 credits)
- AY6010 Fieldwork Placement (30 credits)
Part-time Option
Students take 90 credits over two parts: 60 credits in Part I and modules to the value of 30 credits in Part II. See the Academic Programme Catalogue for the current part-time module options.
Fieldwork Placement
The Fieldwork Placement takes place in one of our partner universities and will be jointly supervised by a team of two supervisors, one based at UCC and one in the partner university. The supervisor in the partner university will oversee and facilitate the practical aspects of the fieldwork project.
Students will be exposed to international perspectives and possibilities facilitated in particular through summer, winter-schools, and fieldwork placements.
The fieldwork placement will offer a unique opportunity for Irish students to engage in ethnographic practice at a range of institutions in India, Latin America, and Europe, and for international students to conduct ethnographic research in Ireland.
The international local and global experience of transcultural learning and communication offers unique academic think-tank and creative spaces which foster global understanding and empathy through local engagement.
Academic Programme Catalogue
See the Academic Programme Catalogue where you can search for the complete and up-to-date content for this course. Note that the modules for all courses are subject to change from year to year. For complete descriptions of individual modules, see the Book of Modules.
Course Practicalities
The MA Anthropology, on the one hand, employs conventional classroom practice and pedagogy but on the other hand, transgresses and broadens it through our schools, and fieldwork placements with partner institutions globally.
Our Summer and Winter Schools, as well as fieldwork placements, offer unique spaces for free and unconventional/alternative thinking and educational practice by means of culturally alienated educational scenarios and contexts.
The MA Anthropology programme may be taken full-time over 12 months or part-time over 24 months from the date of first registration for the programme. Part-time students take at least the core modules in year one and the remainder required for credit over years one and two.
Why Choose This Course
The MA in Anthropology is an innovative and unique programme that fills a large gap in the Irish higher education landscape. Anthropology is uniquely well-placed to provide an analysis of our contemporary local and global situation: Recent and ongoing political and economic crises bring into sharp relief the need to forefront anthropological perspectives and expertise to the benefit of the social sciences and public life.
Placement or Study Abroad Information
The placement will be designed by the two supervisors in consultation with the student before they depart for fieldwork. Students will go on fieldwork placement for one to two months in Ireland, Europe, or to non-European partner universities between the months of April and August. The placement will be monitored by a UCC academic mentor plus a local mentor if the fieldwork is undertaken at a non-European partner university. Students will be expected to report their experiences at agreed intervals.
Skills and Careers Information
Anthropologists can be universally employed as intercultural competency, socio-cultural reflexivity, and cultural literacy represent key social and educational skills in contemporary societies. Identified career paths are:
- Research
- Education
- Higher Education
- International and national politics
- Journalism
- International Organisations (UN, UNESCO, etc.)
- NGO sector
Requirements
A candidate for this MA programme must normally hold a Second Class Honours Grade I in a primary honours degree (NFQ, Level 8) or equivalent, in Anthropology, or a cognate subject in social/cultural sciences (Sociology, Criminology, Management, Development, Political Science, Languages, Social Sciences, Classics, Comparative Literature, Cultural Studies, Study of Religions) or equivalent international qualification.
Candidates who hold a Second Class Honours Grade II in a primary honours degree (NFQ, Level 8) may also be considered under Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) subject to review by the Board of Studies.
Fees and Costs
See our Postgraduate EU and Non-EU (International) Fee Schedule for the latest information.
How To Apply
- Check dates
- Gather documents
- Apply online
Please note you will be required to provide additional information as part of the online application process for this programme. This will include:
- You may enter the details of professional or voluntary positions held. We strongly encourage you to complete this section with all relevant work experiences that will support your application.
- Please describe your motivation and readiness for this programme.
- Please detail your computing/technical/IT skills.
- Please upload your CV.
- Please enter the names and email addresses of two referees. At least one referee should be an academic referee.
All other required supporting documentation (e.g., evidence of Non-UCC undergraduate/postgraduate qualifications) must be uploaded via the applicant portal.
The closing date for non-EU applications is Open until all places have been filled or no later than 15 June. Early application is advised.
