Academic Handbook Course Descriptors and Programme Specifications
LANTH4104 Global Markets, Local Culture Course Descriptor
Course Code | LANTH4104 | Discipline | Anthropology |
UK Credit | 15 | US Credit | 4 |
FHEQ Level | Level 4 | Date Approved | December 2021 |
Core attributes | Interpreting Culture (IC)
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Pre-requisites | N/A | ||
Co-requisites | N/A |
Course Overview
Globalisation is a key feature of modern life, helping reshape markets, transform politics, reconfigure social structures, and remake cultural practices in localities throughout the world. Yet globalisation is not simply a set of forces that are enacted “from above”. Rather, macro-level processes, practices, and ideologies are mediated and shaped by local culture, sub-national politics, and social practices in communities, neighbourhoods, villages, cities, and nations around the world. This course explores the varied and often contradictory processes and consequences of global capitalist development in a diverse set of localities.
Course Aims
The course aims to:
- Provide a foundation in the field of anthropology and globalisation.
- Improve critical thinking skills.
- Improve analytical writing skills.
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
Knowledge and Understanding
K1a | Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the underlying concepts and the various processes typically referred to as globalisation. |
K2a | Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of social changes underway in specific contexts and localities. |
K3a | Compare the experiences of globalisation and economic restructuring in places with distinctive social, political, and economic structures and cultural practice. |
Subject Specific Skills
S1a | Demonstrate knowledge and an appreciation of different types of sources of academic literature, methods of assessment and the evolution of scholarly debates. |
S2a | Understand the major substantive themes concerning the anthropological perspectives on globalisation. |
S3a | Apply general theoretical models to empirical case studies and evaluate the relevance of key theoretical approaches to real-world problems. |
Transferable and Professional Skills
T1a | Structure and communicate ideas effectively. |
T2a | Make effective judgements in contexts of conflicting evidence by analysing information from a wide range of sources. |
T3a | Display a developing technical proficiency in written English and an ability to communicate clearly and accurately in structured and coherent pieces of writing. |
Teaching and Learning
Teaching and learning strategies for this course will include:
Indicative contact hours: 36 hours, typically to include interactive group teaching, co-curriculars, individual meetings, and in-class presentations and exams.
Course information and supplementary materials are available on the University’s Virtual Learning Environment (VLE).
Students will receive individualised developmental feedback on their work for this course.
Students are required to attend and participate in all the formal and timetabled sessions for this course. Students are also expected to manage their directed learning and independent study in support of the course.
Assessment
Formative
Students will be formatively assessed in class through class activities. Formative assessments are ones that do not count towards the final grade but will provide students with developmental feedback.
Summative
AE | Assessment Activity | Weighting (%) | Duration | Length |
1 | Assignment | 40% | N/A | 850 words |
2 | Exam | 60% | 1 hour 15 mins | N/A |
Feedback
Students will receive feedback in a variety of ways: written (including via email correspondence); oral (within office hours or on an ad hoc basis) and indirectly through class discussion.
Feedback on examinations is provided through generic internal examiners’ reports and are made available to the student on the VLE. For all other summative assessment methods, feedback is made available to the student either via email, the VLE or another appropriate method.
Indicative Reading
Note: Comprehensive and current reading lists for courses are produced annually in the Course Syllabus or other documentation provided to students; the indicative reading list provided below is used as part of the approval/modification process only.
Books
Ho, Karen. Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street. Durham and London: Duke University Press. 2009
Chang, Leslie T. Factory girls: From village to city in a changing China. Random House Digital, Inc., 2009.
Reichman, Daniel. The Broken Village: Coffee, Migration, and Globalization in Honduras. Cornell University Press. 2011
Indicative Topics
- The Anthropology of Globalisation
- Global Citizenship: Who is Global? Where is the Global?
- The Culture of Financial Markets
- Structural Adjustments and New Economic Programs
- Global Commodity Chains: Coffee and Tea
- Global Citizenship revisited
- Gender and the Global Workforce
Title: LANTH4104 Global Markets, Local Culture Course Descriptor
Approved by: Academic Board Location: Academic Handbook/Programme Specifications and Handbooks/Mobility Courses |
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Version number | Date approved | Date published | Owner | Proposed next review date | Modification (As per AQF4) & category number |
4.1 | September 2023 | September 2023 | Pablo Calderon-Martinez | December 2026 | Category 1: Corrections/clarifications to documents which do not change approved content or learning outcomes. |
4.0 | August 2023 | August 2023 | Dr Diana Bozhilova | December 2026 | Category 2: Minor amendment to title of course. |
3.0 | October 2022 | January 2023 | Dr Diana Bozhilova | December 2026 | Category 1: Corrections/clarifications to documents which do not change approved content or learning outcomes
Category 3: Changes to Course Learning Outcomes |
2.0 | January 2022 | April 2022 | Dr Diana Bozhilova | December 2026 | Category 3: Changes to Course Learning Outcomes
Category 2: Course Learning and Teaching Strategy Category 1: Corrections/clarifications to documents which do not change approved content or learning outcomes |
1.1 | December 2021 | December 2021 | Dr Diana Bozhilova | December 2026 | Category 1: Formatting and minor corrections. |
1.0 | December 2021 | December 2021 | Dr Diana Bozhilova | December 2026 |