The modules on our MSc Public Policy programme have been carefully put together to give you the most up-to-date and relevant set of skills and knowledge for progressing your chosen career.

Compulsory modules

Grand Challenges (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to give students an opportunity to explore grand challenges facing our global society and to propose imaginative solutions to specific challenges in one or more country.

Students will critically reflect on the United Nations Sustainability Development Goals and think about how Loughborough University's Creating Better Futures. Together Strategy might contribute to them.

Students will engage with ideas and approaches to possible solutions from their own programme and gain diverse insights from Loughborough University London's interdisciplinary ecosystem. This will involve solution-oriented thinking and a balance between criticality and possibility, leading to a deep understanding of grand challenges and imagining creative responses to them.

Global Futures: Policy and Policy-Making for a Sustainable World (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to introduce students to the core theoretical, conceptual and methodological understandings of policy-making. Students will encounter foundational approaches through the lens of real-world examples and scenarios, providing them with opportunities to develop and demonstrate their critical, creative and analytical skills.

Optional modules

Choose one of:

Negotiation - Strategy, Skills and Leadership (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to understand the main features, concepts and practices of international negotiations. It provides an overview of the most important elements of negotiation and offers an application to a number of case studies.

World Trade Law (15 credits)

This module aims to equip students with in-depth knowledge of world trade law and regulation; the contribution it makes to the evolution of international economic law; and the challenges it faces in light of competing theories of development, economic and social globalisation, and inter-state and inter-regional economic conflicts.

Choose one of:

Sustainable and Resilient Development (15 credits)

The aims of this module are to understand opportunities and constraints associated with urbanisation and simultaneous transitioning to a low-carbon economy by many countries. Using Sustainable Development Goals as a framework, the module will take a `whole system's perspective, discussing technological, social, political, cultural, environmental, and economic aspects of sustainability and resilience in the context of broader urban and development issues.

Sport, Politics, and Diplomacy (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to understand the role that sport plays in political and diplomatic issues at a national and international level.

Using contemporary examples from developed, transitioning, developing, and fuel-based economies, the module will explore how sport can be used to positive (e.g., facilitating socio-economic plans) or negative (e.g., whitewashing human rights violations) ends. In doing so, the module aims to promote a critical, evidence-based understanding of the interplay between sport, politics, and diplomacy.

Compulsory modules

Who's policymaking, how and why? Global Players, Actors and Ecosystems (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to introduce students to the diversity of players and actors in the global policy-making space. Students will develop the ability to identify and classify these actors according to recognised criteria and develop the skills to critically evaluate the factors governing their activity and their relative power in the global policy-making space. Students will be confronted with real-life dilemmas of global public policy-making and supported in practising the skills required to project themselves into relevant career paths.

Dissertation (60 credits)

The aims of this module are to give the student the opportunity to study a subject, business problem or research question in depth and to research the issues surrounding the subject or background to the problem.

The module will equip the student with the relevant skills, knowledge and understanding to embark on their individual research project and they will be guided through the three options available to them to complete their dissertation:

  • A desk based research project that could be set by an organisation or could be a subject of the student's choice.
  • A project that involves collection of primary data from within an organisation or based on lab and/or field experiments.
  • A full professional placement within an organisation during which time they will complete a project as part of their role in agreement with the organisation (subject to a suitable placement position being obtained).

Students will achieve a high level of understanding in the subject area and produce a written thesis or project report which will discuss this research in depth and with rigour.

Optional modules

Choose one of:

Strategies and Challenges in the World Order (15 credits)

The module aims to introduce students to the way the changing nature of world order has affected societies globally. Transformations in the world order have brought to the fore risks and challenges that indiscriminately impact peoples around the world. The module explores the nature of these transformations, namely the agency and autonomy that individuals have in mitigating change. Key emphasis will be placed on the identifying the most successful strategies that societies have designed and implemented in order to adapt to changes in the world order.

Some of the most important challenges derived from the evolution of the world order that the module aims to discuss include conflict and geopolitics, global inequality, innovation and progress, resilience and sustainability or migration. The experience of societies in the Global South will be given greater consideration, with a special focus on the impact that the BRICS group of states (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) has on the world order. In broader terms, the module evaluates the various strategies that states, international organisations, businesses or NGOs have developed in order to cope with change in the world order.

Artificial Intelligence and Society: Learning to Live with Machines (15 credits)

The aim of this module is to examine the evolving societal consequences of artificial intelligence and to explore how governments, international organisations and civil society groups are trying to create safe, secure, and trustworthy artificial intelligence systems.

Trade Law and Sustainability (15 credits)

This module aims to equip students with a broader understanding of sustainability issues as they have evolved historically in the international arena, and have more recently been linked to inter/national trade law and policy. Sustainability is conceived as encompassing not only environmental and climate sustainability but also developmental sustainability and gender and labour justice.

The module will develop students' comprehension of conceptual and normative understandings of sustainability, and the role that inter/national trade law, policy and practice play in either enabling governments and international organisations to tackle environmental, gender and labour challenges, or preventing them from doing so.

Choose one of:

Peace and Conflict Transformation (15 credits)

The aims of this module are to:

  • To introduce, compare and contrast traditional and critical approaches to peace and conflict transformation.
  • To undertake empirical case studies, in lectures and via readings and class discussion, as a means of illustrating and critically interrogating competing theories, concepts and debates on intervention, success and failure of contemporary approaches to peace and conflict transformation.
  • Introduce and interrogate recent trends in the practice of conflict transformation, and assess their political and ethical implications.

Research Approaches in International Affairs, Development and Social Change (15 credits)

The aims of this module are to:

  • Enable students to become familiar with a comprehensive range of research methods and techniques relevant to the investigation of international development practices as well as social change and social justice policies and mobilisations.
  • Generate insight and understanding of how different methodologies dialogue with different epistemological perspectives, aligned to specific research paradigms or philosophies.

Choose one of:

Collaborative Project (15 credits)

The aims of this module are to:

  • Provide students with an opportunity to be exposed to project-based teamwork in diverse settings (understood in this context as involving a range of multidisciplinary, multicultural and demographic elements in differing configurations), aiming to strengthen their cooperative and collaborative working skills and competence, while raising awareness and appreciation of diversity itself.
  • Provide students with hands on experience of identifying, framing and resolving practice oriented and real-world based challenges and problems, using creativity, critical enquiry and appropriate tools to achieve valuable and relevant solutions.
  • Support the development of students' ability to engage in critical enquiry and individual reflection, as well as to apply individual strengths and skills, building on their own educational backgrounds.
  • Provide students with opportunities for networking with stakeholders, organisations and corporations, aiming to enhance the competence and skills needed to connect to relevant parties and build up future professional opportunities.

Comparative Political Economy (15 credits)

The aims of this module are to provide business awareness regarding:

  • How businesses and other economic actors are influenced by sectoral, national and global institutions.
  • The differing institutional trajectories along which regional and national economies develop.
  • Examine the relationship between markets, institutions, business strategy and macroeconomic economic outcomes regarding slow growth, inequality and crisis.
  • Provide an introduction to alternative theoretical approaches to understanding capitalism.

Compulsory modules

Dissertation (60 credits)

The aims of this module are to give the student the opportunity to study a subject, business problem or research question in depth and to research the issues surrounding the subject or background to the problem.

The module will equip the student with the relevant skills, knowledge and understanding to embark on their individual research project and they will be guided through the three options available to them to complete their dissertation:

  • A desk based research project that could be set by an organisation or could be a subject of the student's choice.
  • A project that involves collection of primary data from within an organisation or based on lab and/or field experiments.
  • A full professional placement within an organisation during which time they will complete a project as part of their role in agreement with the organisation (subject to a suitable placement position being obtained).

Students will achieve a high level of understanding in the subject area and produce a written thesis or project report which will discuss this research in depth and with rigour.