International Security (POLS90022)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
About this subject
Contact information
July
Overview
Availability | July |
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This subject provides students with a critical understanding of the changing concepts and practices of security in a globalised and dynamic world. The subject contrasts traditional state-centric, military based, and external-oriented national security thinking and policy with non-traditional, critical, and human security approaches. The subject explores key relationships between: the state, society and security, including in 'failed states'; international intervention and security, including the 'responsibility to protect' doctrine; weapons and security, including nuclear weapons; and considers the particular insecurities of marginalised groups, such as forcibly displaced populations. The subject then explores globalised forms of insecurity including information and cyber threats, transnational terrorism and organised crime, global health pandemics, and the nexus between climate change, natural resources, and conflict.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Have a political, historical and cultural understanding of both traditional and non-traditional sources of insecurity
- Evaluate national, regional, and international institutional responses to transnational security threats
- Have strengthened skills in critically analysing different security discourses, including through the 'securitisation' process
- Develop skills in analysing and evaluating contemporary security policy.
Generic skills
Students who successfully complete this subject should be able to:
- Apply research skills and critical methods to a field of inquiry
- Develop persuasive arguments on a given topic
- Communicate oral and written arguments and ideas effectively
- Develop cross-cultural understanding.
Last updated: 4 March 2025