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1st in London for Politics graduate jobs and further study (LEO 2024)

Politics and History BSc (Hons)

Key Information

Course code

LVG1

LVF1 with placement

Start date

September

Placement available

Mode of study

3 years full-time

4 years full-time with placement

Fees

2026/27

UK £9,535

International £17,400

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Entry requirements

2026/7

BBB-BCC (A-level)

DDM-DMM (BTEC)

30-28 (IB)

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Overview

2nd in London for Politics - National Student Survey 2025

If you’re interested in politics and history, you don’t have to substitute one for the other. Why not study both in a combined degree? You’ll find they complement each other in so many ways. What is modern politics anyway but a reflection of yesterday’s political decisions?

Politics and history at Brunel is a dynamic combination of high level study in both subjects. Your politics studies will help you address critical questions like: Who has political power? Why do they have it? And in whose interest do their exercise it? Meanwhile, your studies in history will take you back into the societies of the past in Britain, Europe and the wider world to help you understand contemporary issues all the more. Both subjects will help to demonstrate your intellectual acumen and understanding of world affairs, which will be an asset in so many fields of work.

Whether you’re studying modern Africa, imperialism or intelligence and security, you’ll not just learn about them – you’ll be analysing them using the tools of political science or craft of the historian to help deepen your understanding and critical thinking.

Opt for a placement year and you'll gain work experience that is highly valued by employers. Brunel students have secured placements in the Environmental Audit Committee, the House of Commons, Directorate of Gender Affairs, HM Treasury and the Competition Commission, to name only a few.

It’s a competitive world out there, so you’ll get plenty of support from your lecturers and the University’s Professional Development Centre to help prepare you for your placement year and the world of work.

Why not increase your career options with an accredited journalism course, a free modern language course, or a social media internship? You can even opt to study part of your degree abroad in one of our partner universities in Europe, or participate in an exchange programme to China or the USA.

It’s all available at Brunel to help you make a difference in the world – now and in the future.

Brunel politics and history graduates enter diverse careers. Many of our former students go into politics and the civil service and some are currently at GCHQ and military intelligence. Others work in the public and private sector like the NHS, international banks, business consultancy, law, NGOs and the media.

You can explore our campus and facilities for yourself by taking our virtual tour.

Course content

The course content is made up of a variety of subject area strands that can be studied across all three years of the programme. At every level, there are modules relating to each strand. After taking the compulsory modules in the first year, you can choose to study across a range of strands, or specialise in particular strands. Below is a list of the strands:

History (compulsory elements): This strand focuses on the history of Britain, Europe and the wider world. There will be a chance to explore the social, cultural and political dimensions to the formation and interaction of nations as well as important human phenomena such as exploration, migration and war. There will also be a chance to focus on what historians do and how they do it. You will look at debate, fake debate (e.g. Holocaust denial), controversy and primary sources and, in so doing, build up the skills for your dissertation.

History (elective elements): This strand builds on the strand above. You will be able to develop specialisms in the history of Africa and America or focus on diplomacy and war or study issues of race, gender and identity.

Politics (compulsory elements): This strand equips you with tools to understand contemporary politics at every level. It will focus on political thought as well the differences between diverse political systems (including Britain). You will also you develop the tools for sustained research in political science. This will include research design, qualitative methods, such as interview techniques, as well as quantitative analysis of, for example, polling data.

Politics (elective elements): This strand builds on the strand above. You will be able to study the policies and political systems of other countries, political behaviour and elections and issues of race, culture, identity and public policy.

Compulsory

  • SC1603 - Contemporary Challenges

    This module will introduce students to applications of social and political sciences, providing students with the opportunity to practice the skills needed to communicate the results of their work accurately and reliably, and with structured and coherent arguments.

  • SC1601 - Fundamentals of the Social Sciences

    This module will introduce students to key concepts, theories, thinkers and approaches in the social and political sciences and history. Students will also learn the techniques used by a range of disciplines within the social and political sciences and history for gaining and validating knowledge of the social and political world.

  • SC1604 - Special Subjects A

    This module will introduce students to the underlying concepts and principles associated with their area(s) of study in relation to other areas of the social and political sciences; to provide students with the opportunity to evaluate and interpret these within the context of that area of study. It will also develop students’ ability to present, evaluate and interpret qualitative and/or quantitative data, in order to develop lines of argument and make sound judgements in accordance with basic theories and concepts of their subject(s) of study.

  • SC1605 - Special Subjects B

    This module will introduce students to the underlying concepts and principles associated with their area(s) of study in relation to other areas of the social and political sciences; to provide students with the opportunity to evaluate and interpret these within the context of that area of study. It will also develop students' ability to present, evaluate and interpret qualitative and/or quantitative data, in order to develop lines of argument and make sound judgements in accordance with basic theories and concepts of their subject(s) of study.

Compulsory

  • PP2633 - Explaining Politics: Quantitative Political Science in Practice

    This modules aims to provide students with the skills to analyse political data and introduce methods for gathering and understanding data. Students will be encouraged to critically engage with the use of existing statistical data in political discourse and demonstrate the importance of quantitative analysis in domestic and international politics.

  • PP2631 - From Student to Scholar: Successful Research in the Modern World

    Preparing students for their final year dissertation begins in the second year in From Student to Scholar: Successful Research in the Modern World. This module introduces students to a variety of analytical perspectives, research methods and techniques used in designing a research project in politics, international relations and international politics.

  • PX2613 - Historians and their Craft

    This module prepares students for the Dissertation by introducing them to some methodological and theoretical issues that historians encounter in the practice of history. Students are introduced to ways in which historians have engaged with other disciplines. They reflect upon public history and why history matters in today’s society by tracing developments in historical method and examining different approaches to history.

  • PX2614 - The First World War: Causes, Course, Consequences

    This module aims to introduce the main areas of debate surrounding the origins, course and consequences of the First World War and to introduce the range of different interpretative and historiographical tools used by historians in categorizing and understanding the First World War.

  • PP2638 - Theories of International Relations

    This module introduces students to major theoretical approaches in the study of International Relations. These theories are employed to examine and understand contemporary actors in world politics such as states, international organisations, non-governmental actors as well as major issues and problems such as war, terrorism, climate change or nuclear proliferation. The aim is to give students a critical understanding of IR theory

Optional

  • PP2636 - Climate Politics

    This module aims to enable students to attain a comprehensive understanding of key concepts and theories in the politics and political economy of climate change. It will provide students with resources to assist them in making informed judgments on a range of questions and debates.  

  • PX2615 - Colonialism and Decolonization in Africa

    Africa is one of the most misunderstood and misrepresented regions of the modern world. More often than not, its history is presented as a long series of human disasters, conflict, and disorder. However, Africa’s modern history is also one of resistance, and dynamic and creative responses to changing circumstances. This module examines Africa’s multifaceted history since about 1800.

  • SO2610 - Colonialism, Migration and Global Racism

    This module explores the concept, meaning and practices of ‘race’, ethnicity, racialization, and global racisms. It identifies how ‘race’ and racism have evolved over time, and in different contexts - both nationally in the contemporary UK as well as in other parts of the world. 

  • PX2621 - Fascist Italy, 1919-1945: Revolution, Conflict and Collapse

    This module explores the rise and fall of Fascist Italy through political, socio-cultural, economic and military perspectives, among others.

  • SO2609 - Gender, Sexuality and Feminism

    This module will introduce students to core ideas in feminism via the key concepts of gender and sexuality. It will develop students’ understandings of social structures, human cultures, and economic inequalities and political relationships. The course will offer theoretical tools and historical insights into gendered, feminised, and sexualised socio-cultural worlds.

  • PX2620 - Insurgency and Counter-insurgency

    This module examines the concept and development of insurgency and counter-insurgency from the classical period to the present, with an emphasis on the post-1789 period, especially the post-1945 wars of decolonisation. The module will conclude with the post-9/11 ‘war on terror’ and current examples of insurgency and counter-insurgency. 

  • PP2627 - Issues in American Politics

    This module familiarises students with contemporary issues on the American political agenda and demonstrates how politicians adapt policy stances and organisational and electoral strategies to accommodate change in political debate. Students are encouraged to adopt a more interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approach to learning about American politics by examining social, moral, cultural and economic issues through a partisan political perspective.

  • SA2624 - Middle East: Societies, Religion and Politics

    This module examines a particular ethnographic region, assessing in the first instance whether these regions can usefully be considered cultural areas, and going on to examine the key issues for the different parts of each region. The module covers topics such as religion, gender, economics, and local politics in the area of study. 

  • PX2XXX - Military History and Strategic Thought

    This module looks at and evaluates a range of military and political thinkers and commanders who have been influential in shaping and understanding the nature of modern warfare. This will include those who have looked at war holistically (Grand Strategy, Strategy, Tactics and Operations) and through the prism of political thought and structures, as well as those who have considered certain distinct elements of it – e.g. land, sea and air warfare. Consideration will also be given to the idea of distinct national ways of warfare, for example the so-called “American way of warfare” or the “British Way of warfare”. There will also be an exploration of such concepts as asymmetric warfare, insurgency and counter-insurgency.

    During the module students will be exposed to major pieces of writing (in translation where necessary) from key military thinkers and theorists and will develop an understanding of how to approach the analysis and evaluation of such sources.

    It aims to give students coverage from the Classical period to the present, and it introduces students to strategy as a global concept, with thinkers such as Sun Tzu and Mao Zedong, and ideologies such as Focosim. It assess students summatively through the prism of document analysis of primary sources from different theories across time and space.

  • PP2628 - National Security Intelligence

    This module furnishes students with an overview to the field of national security intelligence. It also examines in greater detail intelligence collection, analysis, counterintelligence, covert action, and other selected topics.

  • PP26XX - Plato’s Republic
    • To explore in depth the foundational text in the history of political thought
    • To develop an understanding of some of the main ideas, themes, images and tropes in the Western tradition of political theory as they emerge from its original text.
    • To develop writing and analytical skills within political thought.
    • To develop the skill of thinking politically.
  • SA2625 - South Asia: Cultures, Societies and Development

    This module examines the region of South Asia, assessing whether the geographical region can usefully be considered as a cultural area, and going on to examine the key issues for the different parts of the region. The module covers topics including colonial histories, caste and class, gender, kinship, globalisation, and South Asian diasporas. It draws, in particular, on the disciplines of anthropology and history and on the field of development studies.

  • PX2xxB - Struggles for Emancipation
    • To examine the tactics and strategies that have been employed by oppressed groups and minorities to secure civil rights, focusing on a specific group or groups as examplars
    • To examine the campaigning strategies and networks developed by activists.
    • To scrutinise the ideas and goals of a movement for emancipation through analysis of primary source documents.
    • To give students understanding of the nature of opposition to the granting of civil rights, and the extent to which it was overcome
    • To give students awareness of the continuing issues left to be resolved after successes in the struggle were achieved
    • To acquire a sound understanding of the historiography on this topic.
    • To develop reading, writing, and analytical skills.

Compulsory

  • SC3602 - Advanced Research Skills for History
    • To introduce and guide students on the research and writing process for dissertations or Major Final Projects
    • To support students to develop their reading, writing, and analytical skills for their dissertation.
    • To introduce students to the techniques used in designing and executing a research project in their discipline.
    • To encourage students’ critical engagement with their chosen dissertation topic
  • SC3601 - Dissertation

    To develop students’ abilities to plan, design and execute a research project in the subject area of their degree programme, to communicate their ideas and critically evaluate the success of their project. 

Optional

  • SO3614 - Apocalypse! Crisis and Society

    Explore the social & political significance of representations of national and global crises, and public perceptions of controversies. Students analyse dystopian popular and scientific discourses that dwell on disorder and catastrophe. Indicative content includes risk, uncertainty, globalisation, the environment, disease, capitalism. Public understanding, perception and engagement with popular and scientific controversies and notions of crisis.

  • CO3617 - Digital Media, Social Movements and Change

    This module gives you an in‑depth, critical understanding of how social movements emerge, succeed or fail to create social or political change, using real‑world cases to explore media tools, leadership, collective identity and governmental or international responses. You’ll build strategic thinking by analysing how historical and contemporary movements organise, mobilise and coordinate in the digital age.

  • SA3631 - Environment and Sustainability

    The aim of this module is to look at environment and sustainability from a multipronged perspective. The module will help students develop a nuanced understanding about managing our natural resources. Both top down and bottom up approaches to manage nature will be explored. 

  • PP3629 - European Union Politics: Problems and Prospects

    In this module students will discuss the development and functioning of the EU from its inception to the present day and be introduced to and learn to evaluate a range of theoretical perspectives on the EU’s creation, development and functioning. Students will examine a range of political problems in the European integration process, such as legitimacy, domestic and social impact, institutional and policy reform, enlargement, and future directions.

  • PP3xxA - Great Power Competition: Russia, China and the USA

    Students will be able to:

    • Relate the great power competition today to historical precedents.
    • Understand the motivations behind Chinese, Russian, and U.S. national security policies.
    • Define the tools that great powers use to further their interests in the world.
    • Compare the ways smaller states influence great powers in the international sphere.
    • Interpret the security risks involved with great powers competing in the political, economic, and military spheres.
  • PP5628 - International Development: Politics and Policy

    This module will analyse the origins of the ‘development’ paradigm, competing theories of different development. trajectories observed globally, and contemporary scholarly perspectives on international development. It will examine and assess global and local challenges and policy solutions, drawing on a wide range of country case studies and will review empirical challenges in international development including data, measurement and evaluation methods.

  • SO3617 - Lawyers, Guns and Money: Making the Modern World System

    This module will explore issues raised by historical and political sociology regarding the development of the modern world-system. In particular the course will focus upon the rise to dominance of Europe in the building of the modern world-system and the explanations offered for this.

  • PP3631 - Marx and the Critique of Political Economy

    This module involves reading several key works by Marx, culminating in several weeks on Das Kapital

  • PP3623 - Media, Politics & Power in America

    This module seeks to familiarise students with the contemporary issues agenda in American politics. It seeks to demonstrate the ways in which politicians and institutions adapt policy stances and organisational strategies to accommodate changes in the nature, content and direction of political debate.

  • GY3610 - Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking

    This module provides a ‘meta-critique’ of both the dominant and critical claims related to modern slavery and human trafficking. The module aims to introduce students to the historical debates on labour and migration that led to the current international laws on ‘human trafficking’ (and national laws on ‘modern slavery’ in the UK and Australia). Students will be able to critically analyse the geopolitics of several competing terminologies, such as ‘human trafficking’, ‘modern slavery’, ‘forced labour’, and ‘unfree labour’. They will be able to critically evaluate whether and how these terms help address labour exploitation and/or are selectively deployed to serve certain political ideologies. Not only will students develop critical lenses to analyse the dominant paradigm of ‘modern slavery’ and ‘human trafficking’, but they will also be able to critically interrogate the strengths, weaknesses, and biases of the critical literature. Overall, the module is designed to encourage students first to engage with critical perspectives and then to go beyond them to decolonise one of the most politically charged debates of the 21st century, enabling them to develop original ideas on how to address the exploitation, oppression, and rightlessness of all workers. 

  • PP3621 - Parliamentary Studies

    This module aims to provide students with a detailed understanding of the UK Parliament by examining its structure, internal processes, and different committees, and to give students an understanding how to transfer the skills they have acquired when thinking about social, historical and political issues to practical ongoing issues that parliament is encountering in its committees or in legislation it is devising.

  • CO3xxD - Politics and Digital Cultures
  • CO3xxC - Political Satire and Comedy

    This module provides students with a sophisticated and critical knowledge and understanding of the relationships between politics, satire and comedy. These relationships are explored in relation to their institutional, historical and social contexts and their textual conventions. The module explores political satire and comedy as it exists in a broad range of texts (e.g. television, cartoons, live stand-up and digital comedy). The module equips students with appreciation and understanding of the continuities and changes in political satire and comedy in national and global political systems and international relations, and its relationship with concepts of political power and hegemony. 

  • PX3XXA - Primary Source Workshop

    This aim of this module is to develop students’ skills in formulating findings on a selected historical topic or topics, using primary source materials. It introduces students to the skills of testing historical interpretations using primary materials and develops their understanding of the nature of these sources, issues concerning their provenance and survival and the ways in which they can be used to construct historical accounts.

  • PP3634 - Public Policy Analysis

    How do governments make public policy? Why do public policies vary across countries? How can public policy be analysed? These are the questions that will be explored in this module. The module will provide the participants with a strong theoretical foundation for analysing public policy and skills to communicate the analyses to non-academic stakeholders in public policy.

  • PX3615 - Slavery and Abolition in the Atlantic World
    • Examine the evolution and expansion to the transatlantic slave trade
    • Explore the motives and factors which led to the development and expansion of slavery in the Atlantic World c. 17 and 18th centuries
    • Analyse the main features and characteristics of slave society in the British West Indies
    • Investigate the origins of abolitionism in Britain
    • Explore the factors which led to successful abolition of both the slave trade and slavery, in Britain and elsewhere in the nineteenth century
    • Familiarise students with the historiography on slavery, the slave trade and abolition in the Atlantic world
    • Introduce students to range of sources on the slave trade and slavery
  • PP3622 - Terrorism and Counterterrorism

    This module aims to address a series of empirical questions regarding the causes, conduct, and consequences of campaigns of terrorism in the modern world. It provides students with an understanding of a series of key debates in the social science literature.

  • PX3626 - The Arab-Israeli Conflict

    We survey the Arab-Israeli conflict, covering three overarching themes: 1) Origins of the Conflict; 2) Evolution of the Conflict; and 3) Peace and its Limits. The module covers the origins of both national movements, the development of the conflict under British rule, the major Arab-Israeli wars, peace agreements, and it ends with recent events. 

  • PX3616 - The Second World War

    This module explores the military, political and socio-economic events and developments of the Second World War. Students will focus on the historiography and cultural significance of the war up to the present day and will adopt an “international history” approach by building its analysis around the interaction of states and peoples in this global conflict.

  • PX3619 - Violence and Conflict in Eastern Africa

    In this module students will explore the role of violence and conflict in the course of eastern Africa’s modern history. Students will gain an in depth understanding of the ways in which violence and conflict have influenced economy, society and polity in the modern era, through a consideration of broad themes, such as age, ethnicity, and resources, as well as specific case studies taken from across the region.


This course can be studied undefined undefined, starting in undefined.

This course has a placement option. Find out more about work placements available.


Please note that all modules are subject to change.

Careers and your future

A major attraction of our courses is the wide variety of career opportunities to which they can lead. Some go into Politics and the civil service and have worked for Members of the Parliament such as John McDonnell MP, or former Labour party general secretary Baroness McDonagh. Other graduates have joined the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Home Office, GCHQ and military intelligence.

Many have gone on to work in public and private sector organisations, such as Chase Manhattan, Marks and Spencer, British Airways, Coca Cola Schweppes, HSBC, and the NHS Confederation.

Significant numbers have taken further training to pursue careers in broadcasting, journalism, law, and teaching at every level.

A degree in history equips you for work as a researcher, teacher or librarian, as well as for careers in the museum and heritage sectors, in NGOs and government agencies, the civil service etc. Past students have also gained employment in company management, business, consultancy and law practice.

UK entry requirements

2026/7 entry

Please check our Admissions pages for more information on other factors we use to assess applicants as well as our full GCSE requirements and accepted equivalencies in place of GCSEs.

A minimum of five GCSEs (grade C/4 or above) are required, including GCSE English Language (grade C/4) or GCSE English Literature (grade B/5)

Standard Offer: GCE A level BBB

Contextual Offer: GCE A level BCC

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Standard Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma DDM in any subject

Contextual Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma DMM in any subject

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Standard Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Diploma DM in any subject and an A Level grade B

Contextual Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Diploma MM in any subject and an A Level grade B

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Standard Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Extended Certificate Merit in any subject, with A level grades BB

Contextual Offer: BTEC Level 3 National Extended Certificate Merit in any subject, with A level grades BC

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Standard Offer: International Baccalaureate Diploma 30 points. GCSE English equivalent SL 5 or HL 4

Contextual Offer: International Baccalaureate Diploma 28 points. GCSE English equivalent SL 5 or HL 4

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Standard Offer: Obtain a minimum of 120 tariff points in the Access to HE Diploma with 45 credits at Level 3 in any subject

Contextual Offer: Obtain a minimum of 104 tariff points in the Access to HE Diploma with 45 credits at Level 3 in any subject

We apply a contextual admissions process for UK undergraduate applicants who meet one or more of our contextual markers – please see our contextual admissions page for more information.

Merit overall in any subject

If your qualification isn't listed above, please contact the Admissions Office by emailing admissions@brunel.ac.uk or call +44 (0)1895 265265 to check whether it's accepted and to find out what a typical offer might be.

Brunel's committed to raising the aspirations of our applicants and students. We'll fully review your UCAS application and, where we’re able to offer a place, this will be personalised to you based on your application and education journey.

Please check our Admissions pages for more information on other factors we use to assess applicants, as well as our full GCSE requirements and accepted equivalencies in place of GCSEs.

EU and International entry requirements

If you require a Tier 4 visa to study in the UK, you must prove knowledge of the English language so that we can issue you a Certificate of Acceptance for Study (CAS). To do this, you will need an IELTS for UKVI or Trinity SELT test pass gained from a test centre approved by UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) and on the Secure English Language Testing (SELT) list. This must have been taken and passed within two years from the date the CAS is made.

English language requirements

  • IELTS: 6.5 (min 5.5 in all areas)
  • Pearson: 59 (59 in all subscores)
  • BrunELT: 63% (min 55% in all areas)
  • TOEFL: 5 (min 4 in all subscores)  

You can find out more about the qualifications we accept on our English Language Requirements page.

Should you wish to take a pre-sessional English course to improve your English prior to starting your degree course, you must sit the test at an approved SELT provider for the same reason. We offer our own BrunELT English test and have pre-sessional English language courses for students who do not meet requirements or who wish to improve their English. You can find out more information on English courses and test options through our Brunel Language Centre.

Please check our Admissions pages for more information on other factors we use to assess applicants. This information is for guidance only and each application is assessed on a case-by-case basis. Entry requirements are subject to review, and may change.

Fees and funding

2026/27 entry

UK

£9,535 full-time

£1,385 placement year

International

£17,400 full-time

£1,385 placement year

Fees quoted are per year and may be subject to an annual increase. Home undergraduate student fees are regulated and are currently capped at £9,535 per year; any changes will be subject to changes in government policy.

For the 2026/27 academic year, tuition fees for home students will be £9,790, subject to Parliamentary approval.

In England and Wales, tuition fees for home undergraduate students are subject to the Government fee cap. The Government has confirmed that this will be £9,790 for 2026/27 and £10,050 for 2027/28 (subject to Parliamentary approval).

From 2028 onwards, the fee cap is expected to rise annually in line with inflation. This means your tuition fees in future years may increase to reflect these changes.

International fees may change annually, by no more than 5% or RPI (Retail Price Index), whichever is the greater.

More information on any additional course-related costs.

See our fees and funding page for full details of undergraduate scholarships available to Brunel applicants.

Please refer to the scholarships pages to view discounts available to eligible EU undergraduate applicants.

Scholarships and bursaries

Teaching and learning

You'll be taught by world leading experts in your field of study, and have the opportunity to interact with fellow students on London’s leading campus University.

Your programme will consist of various learning and studying activities, including lectures, seminars and discussions. Students will study six modules during two terms across the academic year (4 modules and a dissertation in the third year). Each module will have on average two-to-three hours in person contact time per week in lectures, seminars and workshops in the teaching terms. There will also be the opportunity for a further six hours per week to seek guidance during module lecturers’ feedback and consultation hours. Additionally, students can seek support in individual meetings with their personal tutors, both on campus and online. There will also be regular cohort meetings and student society events, at both programme and departmental levels. Field trips and excursions to support students’ learning will be organised throughout the year.

All lectures, seminars, cohort meetings and other social activities will occur in person on the Brunel campus. It is expected that students will regularly attend these events, as sustained engagement with a learning community is a central dimension of the Brunel experience. Online provision of some activities will be made available when it is appropriate to the learning outcomes of your programme.

Students are strongly advised to purchase core texts from module reading lists, although copies are also available via Brunel Library.

Access to a laptop or desktop PC is required for joining online activities, completing coursework and digital exams, and a minimum specification can be found here.

We have computers available across campus for your use and laptop loan schemes to support you through your studies. You can find out more here.

As a student of Politics and History BSc you'll have the convenience of studying within the joint subject area of the Department of Politics and History where your lecturers are all part of the same friendly team who understand the interconnectedness of the two subjects.

You’ll learn in lectures (main classes) and seminars (smaller classes focused on exchanging ideas) by academic staff who are internationally known for publishing and presenting papers worldwide and may even have written some of the books you studied at school or college.

Several are paid consultants to government departments including the Cabinet Office and the Home Office in the UK, the Council of Europe and the Georgian Ministry of Defence. Others like the historian, Professor Matthew Hughes, are internationally known for their research in military or modern history.

Also, the closeness of the Brunel campus to central London’s world-class research facilities like the British Library, Westminster, Whitehall and Chatham House means you’re never too far from a great learning day out or rare archive material for your dissertation.

Should you need any non-academic support during your time at Brunel, the Student Support and Welfare Team are here to help.

Assessment and feedback

You’ll be assessed by a combination of coursework and exams, but most of your time will be spent in private study and reading. In your final year you will produce a final dissertation on a politics or history subject of your choice under the guidance of a dissertation supervisor.

Read our guide on how to avoid plagiarism in your assessments at Brunel.