- UCAS course code
- NN43
- UCAS institution code
- M20
Bachelor of Arts (BAEcon)
BAEcon Accounting and Finance
- Typical A-level offer: AAA including specific subjects
- Typical contextual A-level offer: ABB including specific subjects
- Refugee/care-experienced offer: BBB including specific subjects
- Typical International Baccalaureate offer: 36 points overall with 6,6,6 at HL, including specific requirements
Fees and funding
Fees
Tuition fees for home students commencing their studies in September 2025 will be £9,535 per annum (subject to Parliamentary approval). Tuition fees for international students will be £31,500 per annum. For general information please see the undergraduate finance pages.
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
Scholarships and bursaries, including the Manchester Bursary , are available to eligible home/EU students.
Some undergraduate UK students will receive bursaries of up to £2,000 per year, in addition to the government package of maintenance grants.
You can get information and advice on student finance to help you manage your money.
Course unit details:
Cultural Diversity in Global Perspective
Unit code | SOAN10312 |
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Credit rating | 10 |
Unit level | Level 1 |
Teaching period(s) | Semester 2 |
Available as a free choice unit? | Yes |
Overview
Drawing on comparative examples from the UK, USA, Papua New Guinea, Indonesian Borneo, Brazil, Peru, Mongolia, Trinidad, Uganda, Tanzania, Qatar, and South Africa (among others), the course will examine the complex processes through which global forces interact with local understandings, shaping social, cultural, and political lives. A central question of the course is: How can we best use anthropology to understand global capitalism as a world-system that connects people and places in unequal relationships? Topics include colonialism and neo-colonialism, mobility and migration, the consumption of commodities, the creation, disposal, and processing of waste in global flows, comparative hip hop, and global conservation.
Aims
This course aims to provide an introduction to questions of the relationship between culture and economy, the global and the local from a social anthropological perspective.
Learning outcomes
On successful completion of this course, students be able to:
Understand some key anthropological approaches to globalization:
- Situate anthropological analyses in relation to other social theory
- Understand how anthropologists study processes of globalization and the methodological challenges this study poses.
Present these anthropological approaches, concepts, and debates:
- Summarise key theoretical arguments
- Present ethnographic studies clearly
- Watch films and examine media with an ethnographic eye
- Link general theory to ethnographic description by using ethnographic case studies to make theoretical arguments
Extend these anthropological approaches to their own experiences to develop critical understandings of the global economy and local-global connections:
- Challenge mainstream assumptions about core topics like migration, conservation efforts, consumption patterns, ‘the West’, the market, hip hop, and Indigenous peoples.
- Use examples from students’ own experience together with ethnographic case-studies.
Teaching and learning methods
Lectures, Tutorials, Film, Writing Tasks
Assessment methods
- 1.5 hour exam (or suitable online alternative) - worth 100%;
- Practice midterm essay;
Feedback methods
There are several routes towards feedback on your learning for this course unit.
The most important forum for feedback is provided in the tutorials - this is the place where you can try out ideas and get feedback on them; where you can clarify those aspects of the readings of lecture materials that are unclear; and where you can hone your skills of critical reading, note-taking and summarising arguments. The second mechanism for receiving detailed, individual feedback on your work is through short, structured formative writing exercise that ask you to summarise key texts, comment upon them and relate them to things happening in the world. The third feedback mechanism are drop-in office hours, where you can individually address any questions you have not been able to deal with in the tutorials.
Recommended reading
McManus, John. 2022. Inside Qatar: Hidden Stories from the World's Richest Nation. Icon Books, Limited, 2022.
Niko Besnier, Domenica Gisella Calabrò, Daniel Guinness. 2022. Sport, Migration, and Gender in the Neoliberal Age. Routledge.
O’Hare, Patrick. 2022. Rubbish Belongs to the Poor: Hygienic Enclosure and the Waste Commons. London: Zed Books.
Appert, Catherine M. 2018. In Hip Hop Time. Music, Memory, and Social Change in Urban Senegal. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Dattatreyan, Ethiraj Gabriel. 2020. The Globally Familiar. Digital Hip Hop, Masculinity, and Urban Space in Dehli. Durham: Duke University Press.
Study hours
Scheduled activity hours | |
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Assessment written exam | 1.5 |
Lectures | 20 |
Tutorials | 5 |
Independent study hours | |
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Independent study | 68.5 |
Additional notes
Information
Length of course: 12 weeks