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Undergraduate Qualification details
Introduction
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Who is it for?
Occasional Students
Structure & Syllabus
Assessment
Planning your studies
Study materials
How you Study
Skills & Aptitudes
Duration
Start Dates
Applying & registering
Entrance requirements
How to apply
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Undergraduate

BSc Development and Economics

Is this programme for me?

This degree is for you if you:

  • want to understand contemporary global development inequalities and what can be done about them

  • have worked for a development agency in a developing country and would now like to take a degree

  • would like to pursue a career in development promotion with a government planning agency or a non-governmental organisation

  • are keen to acquire the analytical and communication skills demanded by a wide variety of employers and institutions

  • want to study economics in conjunction with the study of development.

Programme aims

To provide a thorough grounding in the fundamentals of economics, sociology and human geography subjects whose literature demonstrates key links with the process of development.

Programme structure

The degree consists of 12 units when taken through the Standard Route and 9 units through the Graduate Entry Route.

Prestige and career progression

The programme has been developed by academics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), regarded as an international centre of academic excellence and innovation in the social sciences. This degree will prepare you for a career in areas of development promotion with a government planning agency or a non-governmental organisation.

Flexible study at a reasonable cost

You have between 3-8 years to complete the programme. The total fee payable to the University is £2,793 if you complete in the minimum study period (£2,355 for the Graduate Entry Route).

Study materials

The study materials will include:

  • Studying for a Degree in the Humanities and Social Sciences

  • Student handbook

  • Subject guides (offering advice on how to use textbooks)

  • Past exam papers and Examiners' reports

  • Regulations

You need to provide your own textbooks - they provide the main focus of your studies - so before you register for the programme the University will advise you to consider the facilities available to you locally, and how accessible books are likely to be.

Study support and online resources

You can either study independently at a pace that suits you, or enrol for additional classes at a local institution (either full time or part time) and benefit from the more formalized support this provides.

  • LSE arranges a Study weekend in February each year. This consists of short courses designed to help you with examination preparation and technique. You will also have the opportunity to discuss your studies with subject specialists.

  • LSE also runs a Summer School each year, usually from July to mid-August, to which all students are welcome.

  • Online resources including news items, Examiners' reports and past exam papers, student handbooks, Regulations and reading lists.

  • Online Library giving access to Justis.com, JSTOR, ABI/INFORM, Academic Search Premier and Business Source Premier.

Summary of key dates
Application deadline 17 September (non-EU)
17 October (EU)
in the year before you intend to sit your first examinations
Registration deadline 30 November
Despatch of study materials Shortly after your registration form is received
Examinations take place May/June

If you do not have traditional 'A' levels or their equivalent, the Access route has been designed to provide you with an entry route to the degrees in the fields of Economics, Management, Finance and the Social Sciences. The Diploma in Economics, a qualification in its own right, similarly provides an entry route to these degrees (please note that for the Diploma in Economics attendance at an institution that has been given 'permission to teach' by the LSE is compulsory).

This provides an opportunity for graduates of any discipline to gain an additional undergraduate degree by following a shorter than normal programme, successfully completing nine full units rather than twelve. This can normally be achieved in a minimum of two years with the exception of the BSc Economics, BSc Economics & Finance, BSc Development & Economics and the BSc Information Systems & Management.