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BA Culture, Heritage and Politics
About this course
Culture, heritage, and politics might seem like distinct concerns, but they are deeply intertwined in practice. A nation's heritage is never politically neutral: what is preserved, what is demolished, what is commemorated and what is forgotten are all decisions with political dimensions, shaped by questions of power, identity, and belonging. Culture, meanwhile, is the medium through which communities make sense of themselves and contest their histories. Studying all three together means developing a genuinely integrated understanding of how societies remember, represent, and govern themselves. At the University of the Highlands and Islands this part-time programme allows you to study most days of the week while taking fewer course units per week than a full-time student, completing all modules over a longer period. This structure suits students who are managing other commitments alongside their studies, whether work, caring responsibilities, or community involvement. You will explore how cultural policies are made and by whom, how heritage sites and practices are interpreted and disputed, how political institutions interact with cultural identity, and how communities in different regions and nations assert and negotiate their sense of place and history. Scotland offers a particularly rich context for this kind of study, with a vibrant tradition of cultural politics and ongoing debates about heritage, devolution, and national identity. Graduates from programmes combining culture, heritage, and politics work in local and national government, museums and galleries, heritage organisations, arts councils and funding bodies, community development, journalism, and policy research. The analytical and interpretive skills developed in the course are valued across the public, voluntary, and cultural sectors, and in any role that requires understanding how communities function and change. Further study at postgraduate level in cultural policy, heritage studies, politics, or social anthropology is a natural next step for those who want to deepen their expertise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 35 respondents (74% response rate)
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