Degree in International Relations

2024/2025 · 240 credits

Professional and academic career

Planning for teaching

This study has teaching guide
You can read it to learn more about the study. In the table below you can see the individual teaching guides for each subject.

Study structure

The degrees are organized by courses. Click on a academic year for more information.

  Guide Type QTR. credits
History of International Relations I Core 1st 6 ECTS
Sociology of Globalization Core 1st 6 ECTS
Economics of Globalization Core 1st 6 ECTS
Political Geography Core 1st 6 ECTS
Geodemography Core 1st 6 ECTS
International Relations Theory Core 2nd 6 ECTS
Ethics of Globalization and Human Rights Core 2nd 6 ECTS
Anthropology of Global Problems Core 2nd 6 ECTS
Information Systems and Data Analysis Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
Foreign Language I: German Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
Foreign Language I: French Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
  Guide Type QTR. credits
History of International Relations II Core 1st 6 ECTS
International Development Cooperation Core 1st 6 ECTS
Intercultural Communication Compulsory 1st 6 ECTS
Public International Law Compulsory 1st 6 ECTS
Foreign Language II: German Compulsory 1st 6 ECTS
Foreign Language II: French Compulsory 1st 6 ECTS
International Organizations Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
Diversity and Gender Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
European Union Institutions and Policies Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
International Trade Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
Resolution of International Conflicts Compulsory 2nd 6 ECTS
  Guide Type QTR. credits

 BOE with syllabus (PDF)

Teachers

The study is taught by teachers from the departments of: Architectural Projects, Urban Planning and Composition, Biology, Business, Computer Science and Information Technologies, Economics, Health Sciences, Humanities, Languages and Literatures, Physiotherapy, Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Private Law, Public Law and Sociology and Communication Sciences

The degrees are organized by courses. Click on a academic year for more information.

Student mobility

UDC holds student mobility agreements with universities and other third-level institutions across four continents. Students are offered several opportunities each year to apply to study abroad in one of these centres (for a single term or for a whole year), with the guarantee that all credits obtained will be duly recognised in their academic record upon their return.

For each round of applications, the University publishes the list of exchange options available to students and, where relevant, the specific conditions associated with each. Students may also apply to the University for funding for international work experience placements and internships.

Work experience placements are accredited in the student's academic record and the European diploma supplement. Students are free to decide in which host company or academic institution within the EHEA they wish to carry out their placement. To assist them in their search, the University has created an online noticeboard with jobs postings and other news.

Work-study placements in A Coruña are arranged by the International Relations Office (ORI) of the UDC in collaboration with the international relations coordinators in the student’s home university. The general entry criteria, rights and obligations of students, and admission and acceptance procedures for the programme, are regulated by the UDC Mobility Policy.