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MSc Migration Studies: Policy and Practice

  • Study Mode: Full Time
  • Location: Distance Learning
  • Duration: One Year
  • Start Date: September 2025

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MSc Migration Studies: Policy and Practice blends academic research with real-world practice, equipping you to critically analyse migration issues and their governance from a multidisciplinary perspective. Through expert-led workshops and practical case studies, you'll gain the knowledge and skills needed to support migrant and diaspora communities globally and advocate for a just and inclusive future.

Why study MSc Migration Studies: Policy and Practice?

This course equips you with the critical skills needed to analyse complex migration patterns and understand the lived experiences of migrants. It emphasizes a socially engaged approach, combining cutting-edge academic research with practical application, enabling you to navigate and respond to challenges in a rapidly changing global landscape.

Our course offers opportunities to enhance your capabilities in professional practice or policymaking focused on migration issues. You will gain a range of skill sets to work with diverse migrant and minority populations or to obtain employment with specialist agencies supporting these communities.

Our degree is delivered by passionate people with experience in migration studies. Their active engagement with employer organizations and participation in national and international forums ensure that you will receive up-to-date knowledge and insights from the global migration landscape.

Why study at Buckinghamshire New University?

Our programme provides a comprehensive, socially engaged approach to migration, combining cutting-edge academic research with practical, real-world application. You will benefit from engaging lectures and thought-provoking discussions led by experts in the field, allowing you to critically analyse migration from a multidisciplinary perspective, incorporating insights from sociology, economics, politics, and anthropology.

To ensure your learning extends beyond the classroom, the programme also incorporates interactive workshops and seminars delivered by professionals with extensive experience working directly with or within migrant and diaspora communities. These guest sessions will expose you to real-life case studies, providing practical insights into the realities of migration and the skills required to navigate complex issues in professional practice.

In addition, we are proud to offer modern day slavery training to students, in partnership with Hope for Justice, an internationally recognised organisation that works to bring an end to modern slavery and human trafficking, and to protect the human rights of victims and survivors. 

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All Migration Studies students will automatically be enrolled on the Modern Slavery Awareness course delivered by experts from . The course is designed to equip people who are specialists in their own field with relevant, comprehensive and practical guidance, to increase the number of victims identified and improve the response and help offered. It is CPD-accredited and you will receive a CPD certificate when you pass.

The combination of academic knowledge, professional insights, and practical training ensures that our degree not only prepares you for a successful career in migration-related fields but also fosters your development as a compassionate advocate for human rights and social justice. You'll gain essential skills to address modern migration challenges, making this course a strong foundation for both academic and professional success.

What facilities can I use?

Learning materials are uploaded to our virtual learning environment (VLE) to allow you to work flexibly and at your own pace. Via the VLE, you can access course materials, participate in ‘live’ seminars and workshops, and find recommended resources to support your studies. 

Online access to the University library’s digital collection will allow you to find all the information you need for your assignments. You’ll have access to hundreds of ebooks, articles, and specialist online resources.

What will I study?

Throughout the course you will develop a comprehensive understanding of the techniques and research methods applicable to research work on international migration and diaspora communities. You will also develop a critical awareness and understanding of the current knowledge, theory and evidence-based practice relevant to the field of migration, as well as current areas of scholarly interest and policy relevance.

Close attention is paid to ethical perspectives and social justice considerations throughout the course. On completion of this course you will be able to evaluate migration policy formulation and interventions, while effectively communicating the implications and practical applications of your research.

You will also be able to demonstrate a critical awareness of the lived experiences of migrants in society, the social construction of their identities, and their agency. Your learning will support the development of a systematic and critical understanding of processes through which policies impacting migrant, minority and diasporic communities are formulated, implemented, developed and evaluated.

How will I be taught and assessed?

This is a full-time course. You can also choose to study it part time which is over a 2 year period this gives you an additional year to focus on your research dissertation. Teaching methods on the course will include:

  • online lectures
  • online classroom-based activities (utilising Blackboard Collaborate)
  • independent learning methods
  • practical online based sessions (including role-playing and simulations).

A range of summative assessment methods may be employed on this course, as follows:

  • time-constrained assignments
  • poster presentations
  • reflective accounts
  • oral presentations
  • time constrained examinations
  • essays
  • research reports
  • professional style reports e.g. court reports, expert witness reports
  • risk assessment/management reports.

The final empirical dissertation represents a major piece of independent research activity within your chosen field of migration. This will involve several options including collecting original empirical (quantitative or qualitative) data from participants, or equivalent alternatives such as computational modelling of empirical or secondary data analysis, making use of large data sets, or an extended literature review or a performance piece. It will be undertaken with support from an academic supervisor delivered via regular meetings throughout the academic year.

MSc Migration Studies (Policy and Practice) Programme Specification

What are the course entry requirements?

A typical applicant will hold a 2:1 in a related degree such as: Politics & International Relations; Sociology; Social Policy; Criminology; Law; Health; Policing; Geography; Communication & Media Studies; Economics.

Alternatively, you may have a 2:1 in a non-related subject.

Candidates may also currently be working within: NGOs/charities (addressing refugee, diversity, housing, poverty, human rights issues, etc). Applications will be reviewed on an individual basis and an interview may be required.

Modules

This provides a guide of the modules that make up your course. You can find more information about how your course is structured on our Academic Advice section.

What are the tuition fees

Home
  • Home, Academic Year 2025 - 2026: £8,750 per year *
International
  • Overseas/International, Academic Year 2025 - 2026: £8,750 per year *

Following the Government’s announcement of 4 November 2024, we will be increasing our full-time undergraduate tuition fees for UK students to £9,535 per year from the start of the 2025/26 academic year. Our part-time fees for UK undergraduate students will increase to £7,145 per annum. Please visit , on the Government’s website, for more information about the changes. 

Tuition fees for Home undergraduate students (including with foundation year) may increase in subsequent years for both new and continuing students in line with an inflationary amount determined by the Government.   

Tuition fees for both new and continuing international students may be subject to an inflationary increase based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the 12-month period to 31 January each year.   

Tuition fees for postgraduate courses and CPD may be subject to an inflationary increase based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the 12-month period to 31 January each year. This increase will apply to both new and continuing students.   

We understand, and really appreciate, the significant financial commitment our students make when they choose to study at BNU. We take our responsibilities to our students very seriously, and are ambitious for each to reach their full potential and succeed in their chosen career. Our fees help us to continue providing our students with a high-quality education, and to invest in the services and facilities which create an excellent student experience at BNU. 

The following factors will be considered by the University when we set the annual fees: measures of inflation such as the retail price indices; projected increases in University costs; and any changes in the level of funding for teaching received from the Government.

Additional course costs and financial support

Most courses will involve some additional costs that are not covered by your fees.
You could benefit from financial support through a bursary or scholarship during your time as a student. For more details visit our financial support, bursaries and scholarships section.

Questions about fees?

If you have any questions about the fees above, contact our Enquiries team by calling 0330 123 2023 or emailing advice@bnu.ac.uk.

What are my career prospects?

Migration issues are key to policy and practice leadership and strategic development within international organisations, for those working in:

  • Policy and practice
  • Leadership and strategic development within international organisations
  • Academia
  • National and local governments
  • NGOs
  • Third Sector and Front-Line Response agencies
  • Border Agency
  • NCA/Police
  • Media
  • Policy advisers
  • Lobbyists
  • Advocacy
  • Diversity and Inclusion.

Undertaking a programme of this type will also act as a feeder pathway to Level 8 studies providing eligibility to provide for a PhD or Prof Doc. in a related research field.

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