

BA Philosophy and Politics
About this course
Philosophy and politics is one of the most naturally paired combinations in the social sciences and humanities, because the two disciplines share deep questions and complementary methods. Political science studies how power is organised and exercised, how political institutions function, how citizens engage with the political process, and how policies are made and implemented. Philosophy asks the more fundamental questions that underpin political life: what justifies political authority? What does justice require? What are the limits of legitimate state power? How should we think about rights, liberty, equality, and democracy? The combination produces graduates who can think both empirically about how politics works and normatively about how it ought to work. At Cardiff University, you will study philosophy and politics over three years of full-time study. The politics component covers comparative government, British and Welsh politics, international relations, and political behaviour, developing your empirical knowledge of political systems and your analytical skills in engaging with political data and arguments. The philosophy strand covers ethics, political philosophy, epistemology, logic, and the history of philosophy, training you to construct and evaluate arguments with the precision that philosophical analysis demands. Cardiff's location in the Welsh capital gives the degree a particular connection to the institutions of devolved government, and you will be well placed to engage with the specific questions that Welsh political life raises, in addition to the broader comparative and international perspectives of the curriculum. Graduates from philosophy and politics programmes enter careers across public life, policy, journalism, advocacy, and the public sector. The civil service, government, and public policy roles draw on the combination of analytical rigour and political understanding the degree provides. Journalism, political communications, and roles in political parties and campaign organisations are further destinations. Law, which shares with philosophy a commitment to rigorous argument and precise language, is a common choice for philosophy and politics graduates who want to develop their analytical skills in a professional context. International organisations, NGOs, and think tanks value graduates who can think clearly about both the empirical and normative dimensions of political questions. Postgraduate study in politics, philosophy, law, or public policy is a natural next step for those who want to develop greater depth in a particular direction.
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