100 Point Master of Arts (Professional and Applied Ethics)
Master of Arts (Professional and Applied Ethics)Informal specialisationYear: 2023
100 Point Master of Arts (Professional and Applied Ethics)
Contact information
Coordinator
Associate Professor Christopher Cordner
Email: ccordner@unimelb.edu.au
Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Currently enrolled students:
- Contact Stop 1
- General information: https://ask.unimelb.edu.au
Future students:
- Further information: http://graduate.arts.unimelb.edu.au/
- Contact: 'make an enquiry' on http://graduate.arts.unimelb.edu.au/degrees/17-master-of-arts-professional-and-applied-ethics
Overview
This program is offered by the Centre in Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics (CAPPE) and is available through the philosophy discipline in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies in the Faculty of Arts.
Organisational change, political change, wars, globalisation, new technologies and practices, corporate collapses, corruption, scandals in the health and research sectors, environmental disasters, conflicts of interest, as well as the ever-present potential for injustice and disregard for individual human beings that lies within the bureaucratic and hierarchical structures of institutions, all raise distinctive and pressing issues of practice and policy. Finding ethically good and and practical ways of responding to these issues requires a thorough understanding of both the ethical and the empirical aspects of the situation.
Completion of this program will help graduates to be more aware of the ethical dimensions of all the issues they encounter in their professional lives, and also to be able to reflect on and analyse key ethical concepts and arguments in their field of specialisation, enabling them to contribute to policy discussion and development in a wide range of professional, institutional and industry settings. There is scope for students to follow their own interests, with a substantial thesis component and specialisations such as the ethics of health care, computing, business, politics and criminal justice; as well as the broad themes of bioethics and global justice.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who complete the Master of Arts (Professional and Applied Ethics) should:
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better appreciate the ethical dimensions of all they do in their professional lives;
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understand and analyse complex ethical issues;
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detect ambiguity, vagueness, inconsistency, and other weaknesses in the expressions of ideas;
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distinguish different types of question, claim or argument, and respond to them appropriately;
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distinguish what is relevant to a given issue from what is not; and
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see ways in which an argument or explanation could be improved.
Last updated: 4 March 2025
Structure
100 point program
Duration: 1 year full-time / up to 2 years part-time
- two compulsory subjects (25 points)
- minor thesis parts 1 and 2 (50 points total)
- elective subjects (25 points)
Capstone Requirement:
All students are required to complete the Capstone Requirement for the program. Students must complete the following capstone -
Capstone: PHIL90038 Applied Ethics Thesis Part 1 and PHIL90039 Applied Ethics Thesis Part 2 (50 points total)
Purpose: To conceptualise, plan and execute a substantial, independent, research-based project in the form of a minor thesis in applied or professional ethics, demonstrating high level skills in interdisciplinary and comparative research, analysis and critique, underpinned by a thorough understanding of academic protocol and presentation.
For policies that govern this degree, see Academic Services Policy in the University Melbourne Policy Framework. Students also should also refer to information in the Student Policy Directory.
Subject Options
Compulsory subjects
25 points
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
PHIL90004 | Ethical Theory and Practice | No longer available | |
PHIL90032 | Inequality and Public Policy | No longer available |
Thesis Subject
50 points total
Please note: the thesis requires two consecutive semesters of enrolment.
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
PHIL90038 | Applied Ethics Thesis Part 1 | No longer available | |
PHIL90039 | Applied Ethics Thesis Part 2 | Semester 1 (On Campus - Parkville) |
25 |
Elective Subjects
25 points
Please note: the program coordinator may give permission for graduate subjects other than those listed as elective subjects, provided that:
- the subject/s is at an appropriate level;
- they are relevant to the program; and
- permission to enrol has been given by the program/subject coordinator
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
ASIA90001 | Human Rights in Southeast Asia | Semester 2 (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
CRIM90007 | Genocide, State Crime and the Law | No longer available | |
CRIM90008 | Sovereignty, Justice, Indigenous Peoples | Not available in 2023 | 12.5 |
CRIM90011 | Research and Criminal Justice Governance | March (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
CRIM90016 | Community Justice Project | July (On Campus - Parkville) |
12.5 |
CRIM90017 | Violence, Trauma and Reconciliation | August (On Campus - Parkville) |
12.5 |
DEVT90040 | Gender Issues in Development | July (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
GEND90006 | Gender, Globalisation and Development | March (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
GEND90007 | Rethinking Rights and Global Development | August (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
HPSC90012 | Trust, Communication and Expertise | Semester 2 (On Campus - Parkville) |
12.5 |
PHIL90005 | Applied Ethics: Directed Research | No longer available | |
PHIL90009 | Violence, War and Terrorism | No longer available | |
PHIL90010 | Global Justice | No longer available | |
PHIL90025 | Issues in Bioethics | No longer available | |
PHIL90027 | The Moral Limits of Markets | No longer available | |
POLS90038 | Human Rights | Semester 2 (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
PUBL90014 | Legal Issues in Arts and Media | Semester 1 (Dual-Delivery - Parkville) |
12.5 |
PHIL90029 | Climate Ethics and Ethical Dilemmas | No longer available | |
PHIL90041 | The Ethics of Gaming | No longer available |
Links
Last updated: 4 March 2025