Bachelor degree in the political science and international relations

Bachelor degree in the political science and international relations

A modern, career-focused program that blends political science, international relations, data literacy, and practical skills in diplomacy and policy analysis. Designed on an American 120 credit-hour structure (≈240 ECTS) and aligned with internationally recognized quality frameworks. 


Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates will be able to:

  • Explain and compare core theories in politics and IR, and apply them to current issues and regions. 

  • Analyze domestic institutions, electoral systems, public policy processes, and global governance structures (UN, EU, NGOs).

  • Conduct ethical, rigorous research using qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods; interpret political data and public opinion. 

  • Evaluate international law, security, conflict, peacebuilding, human rights, and political economy perspectives. 

  • Communicate clearly in policy briefs, memos, and evidence-based arguments for expert and public audiences. 

  • Demonstrate intercultural competence, diplomacy, negotiation, and teamwork in simulations and real-world projects. 

  • Reflect on ethics, civic responsibility, and professional standards in public service and international work.


Pathways Available

Choose one (or combine as a major + concentration/minor):

  1. Diplomacy & Global Governance – diplomacy, negotiation, IOs, international law, human rights. 

  2. Public Policy & Leadership – policy analysis, program evaluation, public management, civic engagement. 

  3. Peace, Security & Conflict – security studies, conflict analysis, peacebuilding, intelligence basics. 

  4. Political Economy & Development – IPE, development policy, trade, sustainability transitions. 

  5. Regional Studies (e.g., Middle East, Europe, Eurasia) – history, politics, foreign policy of the region. 


Program Goals

  • Deliver a globally benchmarked first-cycle (bachelor’s) education that builds knowledge, skills, and values for public-minded careers. 

  • Integrate experiential learning (policy labs, simulations, internships, MUN) with research-driven teaching.

  • Ensure transparent, standards-based assessment to support continuous improvement and student success. 


Possible Career Options

Public & International Service: junior policy analyst, research assistant, program officer (IOs/NGOs), consular/foreign service pathways.
Communications & Advocacy: public relations, public affairs, political communication (growing PR field; many roles hire BA grads). 
Business & Consulting: market research, country risk, compliance, corporate social responsibility.
Further Study: MA/MS/LLM/PhD in IR, public policy, security studies, law (note: “political scientist” roles typically require graduate study). 


Program Curriculum & Structure (120 credit hours ≈ 240 ECTS)

Structured over 8 semesters. Learning outcomes for each stage follow QAA subject benchmarks and first-cycle (Dublin) descriptors. 

Year 1 – Foundations (30 cr):

  • Introduction to Political Science • LO: map subfields; use basic political concepts.

  • Comparative Politics I • LO: compare regimes & institutions. 

  • International Relations I (Theories) • LO: contrast realism/liberalism/constructivism. 

  • Political Theory I • LO: explain classical ideas on state, rights, justice.

  • Academic Writing & Argumentation • LO: craft evidence-based essays. 

  • Quantitative Reasoning for Social Sciences (statistics) • LO: describe data; basic inference. 

Year 2 – Core Tools (30 cr):

  • Research Methods (qualitative & mixed) • LO: design ethical studies.

  • International Law & Organizations • LO: interpret treaties, IO mandates. 

  • Comparative Politics II (parties, elections) • LO: analyze systems & behavior.

  • International Political Economy • LO: evaluate trade/finance & development debates.

  • Political Theory II (modern & contemporary) • LO: assess normative arguments.

  • Data Analysis Lab for Policy (R/Python/spreadsheets) • LO: clean, visualize, and interpret political data. 

Year 3 – Pathways & Practice (30 cr):

  • Foreign Policy Analysis • LO: apply models to state behavior.

  • Security Studies / Peace & Conflict (pathway) • LO: assess security threats & responses.

  • Public Policy Analysis & Evaluation (pathway) • LO: build logic models; assess impact.

  • Regional Studies elective (e.g., Middle East Politics) • LO: integrate comparative & IR lenses.

  • Experiential: Diplomacy & Negotiation Simulation / Model UN / Internship. Assessed via professional artifacts (position papers, policy brief). 

Year 4 – Integration & Impact (30 cr):

  • Ethics of Public Service & Global Citizenship • LO: reason about dilemmas and standards. 

  • Advanced Seminar (pathway topic) • LO: synthesize research literature.

  • Capstone: Policy Lab or Undergraduate Thesis • LO: produce and defend an original, policy-relevant analysis with appropriate methods and data. (Rubrics aligned with AAC&U VALUE). 

Note: Course titles are illustrative; sequencing and credits can be customized while maintaining first-cycle descriptors and credit volume. 


Assessment Methods

  • Analytical Writing: essays, policy memos, op-eds (clarity, evidence, ethics).

  • Applied Projects: simulations, negotiation exercises, case analyses, policy evaluation.

  • Research Outputs: literature reviews, datasets, replication notebooks, posters.

  • Oral Communication: briefings, presentations, debates.

  • Exams & Quizzes: to check conceptual breadth.
    All assessments use transparent criteria and moderation processes consistent with ESG 2015 quality-assurance guidelines; capstone work is scored with AAC&U VALUE rubrics (e.g., Critical Thinking, Written Communication). 


Entry Requirements

  • Academic: Secondary/high-school diploma (or recognized equivalent).

  • English: B2 CEFR or higher (or institutional placement), demonstrated via accepted tests/interview.

  • Documents: statement of purpose, résumé/CV; optional writing sample; interview for selected applicants.

  • Credit Transfer/RPL: Considered per university policy and international frameworks to ensure level equivalence. 


Awards & Recognition

External awards/competitions we can credibly pursue
  • QS Reimagine Education Awards – categories such as “Nurturing Values & Ethics,” “Employability,” etc., recognizing innovative teaching and impact.

  • National Model United Nations (NMUN) Awards – delegation and position paper awards for student MUN teams. 

  • Hult Prize – global student social-enterprise competition awarding up to USD $1M; suitable for our Political Economy & Development or Policy & Leadership pathways. 

AACTD internal awards we will institute (for our students & partners)
  • AACTD Dean’s List in Global Affairs – top 10% GPA with exemplary civic engagement.

  • Policy Impact Award – best capstone with demonstrable policy relevance (external partner endorsement).

  • Diplomacy & Negotiation Excellence – outstanding performance in simulations/MUN (measured by rubrics and external results).

  • Global Citizenship & Ethics Award – sustained leadership in ethics, inclusion, and community impact.

  • Undergraduate Research Distinction – publication-quality thesis or conference presentation.


Why study PS/IR at AACTD?

You’ll graduate with the theory, methods, and professional toolkit to analyze, communicate, and lead in government, NGOs/IOs, media, consulting, and business—supported by internationally benchmarked outcomes, transparent quality assurance, and high-impact learning. 

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