

MA Social Anthropology
About this course
Social anthropology is the comparative study of human societies and cultures. It is a discipline that asks how people organise their social lives, what gives meaning to their experience, and how cultural practices and beliefs that may seem strange from the outside make profound sense when understood from within. Anthropology is built on the method of ethnography, long-term immersive fieldwork in which you engage directly with a community or social setting, and this gives its practitioners a distinctive capacity for empathy, attentiveness, and cross-cultural understanding that is rare among social scientists. At the University of Edinburgh, one of the world's great research universities, this four-year full-time programme reflects the Scottish Honours tradition, offering a broader first two years before you specialise and deepen your knowledge in the final years. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to conduct fieldwork or study in a different cultural context as part of your degree. Edinburgh's position in Scotland and its connections with anthropological research networks across the world mean you will be learning in a genuinely international intellectual community. The typical entry tariff of 200 points reflects the highly competitive nature of the programme and the depth of analytical ability it expects. You will engage with the major theoretical traditions of the discipline, from structuralism and interpretivism to feminist and postcolonial anthropology, and you will develop skills in qualitative research, ethnographic writing, and comparative analysis. Social anthropology graduates are prized for their ability to understand and navigate social and cultural complexity, making them effective in roles that require cross-cultural communication, qualitative research, and nuanced analysis. Careers span international development, NGOs, public policy, research, journalism, education, and the civil service. Many anthropology graduates also work in healthcare, social services, and organisations concerned with migration, human rights, and social justice, where the discipline's insights are directly relevant. Postgraduate study in anthropology, development studies, international relations, or related fields is a natural next step for those who want to pursue research or specialist practice.
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