BA Political Science (Curriculum 2024)


The following information on the Bachelor’s degree program in Political Science refers to the new curriculum adopted in 2024. This curriculum applies to all new students enrolling from winter semester 2024/25 onwards. If you are enrolled in the 2016 curriculum, you can either complete your studies according to this curriculum by October 1, 2027 at the latest or switch to the new curriculum by notifying the Office of Admissions.

 

General Information

The bachelor’s program comprises 6 semesters of study and requires 180 ECTS credits for completion – one ECTS credit equals 25 hours of academic work. The degree program consists of 60 ECTS credits of mandatory courses, 72 credits of elective modules, 12 ECTS credits of internship work, 12 ECTS credits are apportioned to the bachelor’s seminar and the bachelor’s thesis and 24 ECTS credits to free electives. The program commences with a legally mandated introduction and orientation phase (“STEOP”) the successful completion of which determines whether students may proceed in the program. It is comprised of two lectures, Introduction to Political Science and Politics viewed from a Scientific Perspective (4 ECTS credits, respectively).

The BA curriculum is divided into six core areas: Political Theory (political ideas), Comparative Politics, Austrian Politics in Comparative Perspective, International Relations, Politics of the European Union, and – new since 2024 – Politics and Gender, Diversity and Equality. In each core area, students must take a foundational introductory lecture. Then the students must select four of the six core areas to  attend a more in-depth proseminar and two thematically focused seminars, where they write research papers. To complete the BA program, students will need to take coursework in working techniques in Political Science as well as quantitative and qualitative research methods (to be taken prior to attending seminars), free electives, and an internship. Training in empirical research methods is a particular priority in the BA program. As such, methods’ training begins in the summer semester with a lecture on research design to be accompanied by a pro-seminar on qualitative research methods and continues in the winter semester with a lecture on quantitative methods and a corresponding pro-seminar.

 

What will I learn?

In the BA degree courses in Political Science, you will deal with political players, institutions and processes, the political culture of various countries and selected fields of politics. You will examine how political players understand their roles and the motives by which they are driven, how their actions are restricted by political institutions and how political power is exerted. Moreover, you will develop empirical and analytical, professional and methodical skills. These skills enable you to develop innovative research questions and to compose written works, which are theoretically and methodically profound. Students acquire the ability to grasp political and social problems, to work out practical solution strategies, to present them convincingly and to advocate them argumentatively.

 

Which career opportunities do I have?

Through this BA degree courses, you are qualified for responsible tasks in public administration, lobbying and non-government organizations (NGOs), in the field of PR and foreign ministries.

 

Why Salzburg?

There are several good reasons to enrol for a BA degree program in Political Science at the University of Salzburg, such as the high quality and international orientation of teaching and research, the flexible and individual organisation of the courses, small seminar groups, close supervision, the cooperation with the Salzburg Centre for European Union Studies (SCEUS), and the appeal of the course locations.

 

Links

 

Important information: The teaching language of our bachelor’s program is German! For additional information about our BA Politikwissenschaft please take a look at our German website.