Master's Programme in Holocaust and Genocide Studies

120 credits

Programme syllabus, HFF2M

Code
HFF2M
Finalised by
The Faculty Board of Arts, 22 August 2023
Registration number
HISTFILFAK 2023/86
Responsible faculty
Faculty of Arts
Responsible department
Department of History

Decisions and guidelines

A Master’s Programme in Holocaust and Genocide Studies has been established at the Hugo Valentin Centre, Uppsala University. The teaching is based at the Hugo Valentin Centre in collaboration with other departments in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The language of instruction is English.

Entry requirements

Academic requirements

A Bachelor's degree, equivalent to a Swedish Kandidatexamen, from an internationally recognised university. The main field of study must be within the humanities or social sciences.

Language requirements

Proficiency in English equivalent to the Swedish upper secondary course English 6. This requirement can be met either by achieving the required score on an internationally recognised test, or by previous upper secondary or university studies in some countries. Detailed instructions on how to provide evidence of your English proficiency are available at universityadmissions.se.

Aims

The programme aims to provide students with the empirical and theoretical knowledge, as well as the methodological skills necessary to independently and critically understand and analyse the history of the Holocaust and its historiography, as well as the background and character of genocide and other forms of mass violence and its effects on individuals and society.

The programme has a distinctively interdisciplinary character and involves studying mass violence and its effects in different historical, cultural and social contexts on the basis of theories from political science, sociology, psychology and social psychology. The student is also expected to author a Master's thesis of high quality, which is firmly based on previous research and contributes with new knowledge to the field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies.

The skills and knowledge acquired provide the basis for graduate studies in the humanities and social sciences (e.g. history, peace and conflict research, sociology, or cultural anthropology), as well as for the professional work in government, education/adult education, museums, journalism, or international organisations.

Learning outcomes

After completing the Master's degree, the student is expected to be able to:

  • independently and critically identify and analyse problems that are of central importance to the field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies;
  • actively monitor and make use of research in this area;
  • apply the theories underlying the research on the background, nature and consequences of genocide and massive violence;
  • use the methodological skills that form the basis for the study of mass violence in a comparative perspective;
  • independently identify and demarcate a theoretically relevant research topic;
  • write a Master's thesis based on established theories and methods, which provides new knowledge to the field;
  • independently appraise and critique the work of others;
  • actively participate in discussions with well-grounded contributions;
  • make summaries of current research, as well as of his or her own work;
  • monitor developments in the field of research from an interdisciplinary approach;
  • in light of knowledge about the effects of massive violence on individuals and society, identify relevant issues in specific areas of conflict.

Layout of the programme

During the first semester students acquire basic empirical knowledge about the Holocaust and other cases of genocide and massive violence, as well as theoretical knowledge about fundamental concepts and skills in comparative method. This empirical knowledge is linked subsequently during the second semester to theoretical courses on the mechanisms of violence. Later during the second and third semesters the students have the opportunity to immerse themselves in a special area by reading other courses given by the Hugo Valentin Centre or other departments. The students who take a one year Master's degree (60 credits) will take four compulsory empirical courses during the first semester; a theoretical course during the second semester, and write a 15 credit thesis at half-time. The students who take a two year Master's degree (120 credits) will take four compulsory empirical courses during the first semester, three compulsory theoretical courses during the second semester, and start writing a 45 credit thesis from the second half of the third semester, or alternatively write a 30 credit thesis in the fourth semester.

Instruction

Instructions include lectures and seminars; written assignments; oral presentations individually and in groups; and supervision.

Degree

After completing the one-year Master's programme the student receives a Master's degree (filosofie magisterexamen) in main field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies. After completing the two-year Master's programme the student receives a Master's degree (filosofie masterexamen) in main field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Uppsala University.

FOLLOW UPPSALA UNIVERSITY ON

facebook
instagram
twitter
youtube
linkedin