Understand and address the world’s most pressing challenges, including war and peace, social and economic justice, poverty, development and environmental sustainability. Investigate relations among states and non-state actors, including the evolution of the international system. Develop sophisticated critical thinking through this intellectually rigorous, research-intensive program. The Master of International Relations allows you to specialise in Economics, Political Economy, Peace and Conflict Studies, Sociology, Social Policy and Development, or International Law. You will gain a deep understanding of complex problem solving in a globalised world. The Department of Government and International Relations is one of the largest of its kind in Australia, with links to some of the major policy think tanks in Australia, such as the Australian Institute of International Affairs, and the Lowy Institute. We also house the Centre for International Security Studies and the Electoral Integrity project. Our academics are recognised experts in international relations theory, public policy, international political economy and security, Australian and comparative politics, migration, and North and Southeast Asian politics.
This specialisation permits the study of core areas of American Foreign Policy, with special emphasis on its role in Asia and the Indo-Pacific. Study is informed and supported by the US Studies Centre, a university-based research centre dedicated to the rigorous analysis of American foreign policy, economics, politics and culture. The US Studies Centre conducts multiple research and teaching programs, including in Foreign Policy and Defence, and frequently hosts events with leading Australian and American politicians, policy makers and practitioners.