About the Course

The MPhil in Ethnic and Racial Studies was a unique postgraduate programme offering specialist theoretical training in issues relating to race, immigration, ethnicity and conflict in Irish, European and global contexts. It was established by the Department of Sociology in Trinity College in 1997.  The timing was good: Ireland’s long-running ethno-national conflict was about to end, and in the same moment Ireland, traditionally a country of emigration, was about to become an immigration destination. Ethnic conflict and its management was part of the programme from the outset and we have now changed the programme’s title to reflect that:  MPhil in Race, Ethnicity, Conflict. We do not plan radical changes to the programme, but courses will reflect recent research by staff, taking in more case studies; including Northern Ireland, Israel-Palestine and the Middle East, the Balkans, as well as the racialisation in the Irish context of migrants and indigenous ethnic minorities, such as Travellers, black-Irish people and Jews,

The MPhil is run by the Department of Sociology whose members have extensive publishing record in this area. Upon successful completion, this full-time programme grants students a postgraduate degree of Masters of Philosophy in Race, Ethnicity, Conflict. The 12-months programme begins in September each year, and consists of two full-year core courses, several elective modules and a dissertation. Students are also free to select modules from the Department’s other Masters programme, the MSc in European Employment Studies. In addition, the programme hosts seminar series, workshops and international conferences.

The programme attracts an ethnically diverse international student body and our graduates play key roles in research and policy organisations in Ireland and globally; many have continued to PhD research.

“In my view this is the best course of its kind on offer in Europe and perhaps even the world. Dr Ronit Lentin and the staff do an extraordinary job delivering a high quality programme”
Prof Les Back, Goldsmith College London- External Examiner 2003-7


“This outstanding programme gives students a real opportunity to face the  diversity of immigrant experience and the reality of globalism that challenges the narrow nationalism and racism of our modern societies”
Prof John Jackson, Professor Emeritus, Department of Sociology, TCD

Over the years the programme has hosted many key scholars in this area, including Prof Zygmunt Bauman, University of Leeds; Prof David Theo Goldberg, University of California; Prof Philomena Essed, University of Amsterdam; Prof Noel Ignatiev, Massachussetts College of Art; Prof Luke Gibbons, University of Notre Dame, Prof Howard Winant, University of California, Santa Barbara; Robbie McVeigh, Derry.

“This is the first and only course of its kind in Ireland; it is excellently organised and caters for a wide variety of students from within and outside Ireland”
Prof Nira Yuval-Davis, University of East London, External Examiner 1997-2000

APPLICATIONS AND DEADLINES: Rolling deadline from 10 December 2009 to 30 June 2010. All applications to Graduate Admissions online through www.pac.ie/tcd

FURTHER INFORMATION: Dr Ronit Lentin, Course coordinator, Department of Sociology, TCD. Tel: 353 1 8962702. email: rlentin@tcd.ie