
Overview
- Degree awarded
- Master of Arts (MA)
- Duration
- 1 year
- Entry requirements
-
We require a UK bachelor's degree with a First or Upper Second classification or the overseas equivalent, in any discipline.
When assessing your academic record we consider your degree subject, grades you have achieved and the standing of the institution where you studied your qualification.
- How to apply
- Apply online
Course options
Full-time | Part-time | Full-time distance learning | Part-time distance learning | |
---|---|---|---|---|
MA | Y | Y | N | N |
Course overview
- Study at one of the UK’s Top 5 Universities for Social Sciences (Times Higher Education 2024).
- Develop a sound understanding of peace interventions (e.g. conflict resolution, mediation, peacekeeping, peacebuilding) and their mixed outcomes.
- See peacebuilding and peace formation in action on an academically and culturally enriching international field trip.
- Benefit from a programme developed by one of the world’s most prominent peace scholars, Professor Oliver Richmond, at a university with a long tradition of peace related scholarship.
Open days
On this day, you will learn more about the School, our resources, and meet academic and admissions staff who will be able to answer any questions you have.
For more information, see open days and visits .
Fees
For entry in the academic year beginning September 2025, the tuition fees are as follows:
-
MA (full-time)
UK students (per annum): £17,000
International, including EU, students (per annum): £27,500 -
MA (part-time)
UK students (per annum): £8,500
International, including EU, students (per annum): £13,750
Further information for EU students can be found on our dedicated EU page.
The fees quoted above will be fully inclusive for the course tuition, administration and computational costs during your studies.
All fees for entry will be subject to yearly review and incremental rises per annum are also likely over the duration of courses lasting more than a year for UK/EU students (fees are typically fixed for international students, for the course duration at the year of entry). For general fees information please visit postgraduate fees .
Self-funded international applicants for this course will be required to pay a deposit of £1,000 towards their tuition fees before a confirmation of acceptance for studies (CAS) is issued. This deposit will only be refunded if immigration permission is refused. We will notify you about how and when to make this payment.
Policy on additional costs
All students should normally be able to complete their programme of study without incurring additional study costs over and above the tuition fee for that programme. Any unavoidable additional compulsory costs totalling more than 1% of the annual home undergraduate fee per annum, regardless of whether the programme in question is undergraduate or postgraduate taught, will be made clear to you at the point of application. Further information can be found in the University's Policy on additional costs incurred by students on undergraduate and postgraduate taught programmes (PDF document, 91KB).
Scholarships/sponsorships
For information on available funding, please see fees and funding or search the University's postgraduate funding database .
Contact details
- School/Faculty
- School of Social Sciences
- Contact name
- School of Social Sciences Admissions Office
- Telephone
- +44 (0) 161 306 5500
- pgt-politics@manchester.ac.uk
- Website
- http://www.socialsciences.manchester.ac.uk/politics/
- School/Faculty
-
See: School Subjects
Courses in related subject areas
Use the links below to view lists of courses in related subject areas.
Entry requirements
Academic entry qualification overview
We require a UK bachelor's degree with a First or Upper Second classification or the overseas equivalent, in any discipline.
When assessing your academic record we consider your degree subject, grades you have achieved and the standing of the institution where you studied your qualification.
English language
Applicants whose first language is not English should meet the following language requirements:
- IELTS Academic test score of 7 overall, including 7 in writing with no further component score below 6.5
- TOEFL IBT 100 with 25 in writing and no further score below 22 in each section. TOEFL code for Manchester is 0757
- Pearson Test of English (PTE) score of 76 overall, with 76 in writing and no further score below 70
Further information on accepted language requirements can be found here .
Pre-Sessional English Courses
We will consider applicants who do not meet these scores but you will be required to complete a pre-sessional English language course at the University of Manchester prior to the start of the course.
To be considered for a pre-sessional English language course for this programme we require the following minimum IELTS (Academic) scores:
6 Week Pre-Sessional Course : IELTS 6.5 overall with 6.5 in writing and no more than one sub-skill of 6.0.
10 Week Pre-sessional Course : IELTS 6.0 overall with 6.0 or above in each sub-skill
If you have not yet completed your current academic study and are interested in studying a pre-sessional course, you must hold an IELTS for UKVI (Academic) test certificate to ensure that you are eligible for a separate visa for the English language course.
English language test validity
Some English Language test results are only valid for two years. Your English Language test report must be valid on the start date of the course.
Applicants from Majority English-speaking countries
If you are a national of a majority English-speaking country (or have studied for a full bachelor's degree or higher from one of these countries) you may be exempt from submitting further evidence of English language proficiency.
Other international entry requirements
We accept a range of qualifications from across the globe. To help international students, the university provides specific information for many individual countries. Please see our country-specific information page for guidance on the academic and English language qualifications which may be accepted from your country.
Application and selection
How to apply
Advice to applicants
Please note, due to the high volume of applications we receive the course may close before the advertised deadline and as such, early application is advised.
If you meet our entry requirements but we are unable to make you an offer you may be placed on a waiting list. Candidates on a waiting list will receive an offer only if places become available.
Re-applications
Transfers
Course details
Course description
With peace processes collapsing into war in many places around the world, there has never been a more important time to study how and why peace processes succeed or fail. With the help of award-winning academics, our Peace and Conflict Studies master's course will build your understanding of that process.
You will learn about the challenges of resolving conflicts and preventing their recurrence, focussing particularly on contexts which have been affected by conflict since the end of the Cold War.
This course has a particular focus on the actors responsible for building peace, from grassroots agents to intergovernmental organisations like the United Nations. It will also empower you to critically evaluate the very notion of peace itself from postcolonial, gender and global justice perspectives.
Throughout the course you will develop skills in critical enquiry, conflict analysis, critical thinking, presenting research and team work.
At the point of completion, you will be well placed for a career in international and regional organisations, policy analysis, the NGO and international NGO sector, foreign ministries and development agencies.
Aims
You will be able to develop a critical understanding of:
1. Key issues and debates related to the theories in Peace and Conflict Studies such as conflict management, conflict resolution, conflict transformation. We will investigate how thinking about peace has changed across the different generations of theorising, with particular reference to the main debates in International Relations theory.
2. Concepts and practices used within the international peace architecture, especially peace negotiations, mediation, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and statebuilding. We will examine how these practices are supposed to work together and explain why peace processes stagnate or falter despite such concerted efforts.
3. The range of international actors and organisations, their policies and practices, and the benefits as well as shortcomings of their interventions. Here, we will also analyse the factors that are blocking international and localised efforts to promote peace.
4. The range of social science topics that influence peacebuilding, statebuilding, conflict management, etc., (including political, historical, anthropological understandings of peace and related programming strategies). Students will become familiar with the methodological and normative underpinnings of these disciplines.
5. The analytical and policy literature concerning peacebuilding, international governance structures, statebuilding, and the role of key actors and institutions including NGOs and military and other security actors. Students will be able to evaluate the theory and policy tools in the context of the recent history of peacebuilding and statebuilding since the end of the Cold War.
6. An understanding of local approaches to peacebuilding, including an awareness of the problems and critiques associated with `bottom up' approaches. Students will examine current debates on the nature of everyday peace and hybrid forms of peace, related questions about `local agency' and forms of resistance, activism, and social mobilisation.
7. You will experience the on-the-ground realities of peacebuilding and statebuilding through a research fieldtrip to Bosnia and Herzegovina or Cyprus. You will encounter the range of actors involved in the peace process (from international to regional, national, and local actors) and you will be able to conduct your own research.
Special features
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It's amazing that this programme is only one year because I learned so much nuanced material.
The professors in the politics department are passionate, helpful and understand how to preapre students for academia or outside research. The fieldwork trip to Bosnia and Herzegovina is especially rewarding.
Liliana Solomon, USA / MA Peace and Conflict Studies graduate
This course offers a novel configuration for research, teaching and practical inquiry. It uniquely examines the perspectives of peace practitioners, researchers and policymakers within the broader international peace architecture.
As a student, you will have the opportunity to enhance your learning with voluntary workshops, including:
- country-specific case briefings;
- discussion of policy analysis with UN staff;
- a specially dedicated Peace and Conflict Studies speaker series with key thinkers in the field;
- Manchester Peace and Social Justice Walk.
You will also benefit from additional activities such as:
- conflict mapping internship;
- attending the annual peacebuilding conference in Manchester, where you can participate in a student panel
Research trip (usually to Bosnia Herzegovina)
Throughout the field trip, you will develop conflict-sensitive research skills. Linked to the semester two course on research methods, you will utilise the techniques learnt in class in a practical environment.
You will meet policymakers, staff of international and regional organisations (such as the UN, OSCE, EU, OHR), and local peacebuilders. Afterwards, you will carry out your own small-scale research project. You will be encouraged to reflect on the multi-layered nature of peacemaking.
The fieldtrip is not primarily about the data gathered, but helps you experience the complexity of peacemaking first-hand.
Accommodation and travel costs are included in your student fees.
Teaching and learning
This MA will be influenced and informed by the research of both staff and postgraduate research students at the department including research projects on:
- political space in the aid industry;
- local/hybrid approaches to peacebuilding;
- the contribution of BRICS nations to peace and security programming;
- critical peace studies;
- the role of the state in peace and security programming;
- ethnographic approaches to understanding violence;
- refugees and internally displaced persons;
- the political economy of conflict;
- performance in conflict zones.
Coursework and assessment
Forms of assessment will include:
- research essays (3,000+ words);
- the running of group workshops;
- reflective journals/learning logs;
- contribution to group discussion boards (electronically);
- oral presentations;
- literature reviews/research design.
Course unit details
Students will take all of the following Core Modules (15 Credits Each):
- Peace and social agency:
This module will introduce students to key theories and concepts related to the study of peace, security and conflict. It will expose students to key debates related to these topics (both conceptual and practical) and provide students with an appreciation of the diversity of relevant policies at the international, regional, national and sub-national levels. It will provide them with an analytical toolbox which can be used to explore issues related to peacebuilding in theory and practice-tools which can be used in this module, other modules on the degree and in their professional lives.
- Practical approaches to studying conflict-affected societies
TThis module explores issues of epistemology, positionality and research methods associated with field research in peacebuilding environments. This unit will involve a compulsory research trip that is intended to challenge the notion of a conventional field trip and to expose students to the practical and ethical dilemmas of field research.
- Dissertation (12 000 - 15 000 words) which is worth 60 Credits.
Optional Modules: Students are expected to choose 90 credits (45 per semester) from the list of optional course units.
Course unit list
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
Rethinking Peacemaking in the 21st Century | POLI70991 | 15 | Mandatory |
Practical Approaches to Studying Conflict Affected Societies | POLI71102 | 15 | Mandatory |
Dissertation | POLI72000 | 60 | Mandatory |
Humanitarianism and Conflict Response: Inquiries | HCRI60031 | 15 | Optional |
Anthropology of Violence and Reconstruction | HCRI60131 | 15 | Optional |
Humanitarian Diplomacy and Negotiation in Practice | HCRI60222 | 15 | Optional |
Governing in an Unjust World: Justice and International Relations | POLI60182 | 15 | Optional |
The Ethics Of Killing | POLI60221 | 15 | Optional |
Global Governance | POLI70422 | 15 | Optional |
Human Rights in World Politics | POLI70492 | 15 | Optional |
Displaying 10 of 18 course units | |||
Display all course units |
Scholarships and bursaries
The School offers a number of awards for students applying for master's study.
To find our more, please visit our master's funding opportunity search page.
Facilities
Disability support
Careers
Career opportunities

Before taking this postgraduate course, I have always considered myself to have a solid professional experience in a variety of areas related to this course as I spent more than 9 years working with different UN agencies in conflict-affected countries.
The top-quality learning methodologies and the excellent teaching cadre have turned this programme into an eye-opener and a thought-provoking experience theoretically and practically. Indeed, the excitement in this postgraduate programme from the discovery through the process of in-depth learning and interaction is immensely satisfying.
Fakhri Mansour, Syria / MA Peace and Conflict Studies graduate
The University of Manchester is the most targeted by the UK’s largest graduate employers (High Fliers, 2023).
The University has its own dedicated Careers Service that you would have full access to as a student and for two years after you graduate. At Manchester you will have access to a number of opportunities to help boost your employability .
As a graduate of this course, you’ll be able to pursue a wide range of career choices, including:
- Civil Service (working within various government ministries, including the foreign office and international development office).
- International and regional institutions (such as the United Nations and the European Union).
- Foreign services and national aid organisations
- NGOs working on peacebuilding initiatives.
- Academia/research institutes/think-tanks.
For more information, see Careers and Employability .