Sustainable societies: Current frontiers in politics
Today, rapid technical advancements, spiraling global inequalities, heightened geopolitical tensions and resurging armed conflict coincide with a warming climate, a crisis-prone globalized economy and unprecedented movements of goods, people and ideas across borders. As a result, political practices, norms and institutions transform at a fast pace. This course takes stock of contemporary societal challenges and asks how an inclusive sustainable future can be (re)imagined in the context of multiple crises. It provides students with an overview of cutting-edge frontiers in both academic research and political practice. What novel concepts and theoretical resources can help us make sense of our times? How can contemporary challenges be studied empirically, and how can they be tackled in practice amidst global normative aspirations towards an inclusive sustainable transition? The course literature charts recent debates in political science and neighboring social science disciplines on pressing political issues of the day, such as the politics of AI, the climate crisis and technologies of earth governance, health in a post-pandemic world, populist and misogynist political movements, material inequality and social cohesion, and the future of liberal democracies and international institutions. At the end of the course, students will be well acquainted with key contributions at the forefront of contemporary academic debates, and well-equipped to formulate relevant research questions that push the borders of current conversations, in both research and practice.
Occasions for this course
Autumn semester 2026
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Scope
7.5 credits
Time
2026-08-31 - 2026-10-04 (full time 100%)
Education level
Second cycle
Course type
Freestanding course
Application code
MDU-10474
Language
English
Study location
Independent of location
Teaching form
Distance learning
Number of mandatory occasions including examination: 0
Number of other physical occasions: 0Course syllabus & literature
See course syllabus and literature list (SKA310)Specific requirements
A completed Bachelor’s degree from an institution of higher education of three years or more, equivalent to at least 180 credits and with a major in the field of political science or an equivalent academic field. In addition Swedish course 3 or Swedish level 3 and English course 6 or English level 2 are required. For courses given entirely in English exemption is made from the requirement in Swedish course 3 or Swedish level 3.
Selection
University credits