专业详情
International Relations addresses the ways in which governments, private groups, and individuals relate to each other in the global political and economic systems. The program provides a solid grounding in the methodologies of political science, history, and economics. The curriculum draws on the best courses relevant to world politics, offers a well-rounded liberal arts education, and helps prepare students for law or business school, Ph.D. programs, and international careers.
Few majors are as rewarding or flexible as International Relations. Every aspect of commercial and public life is affected by international events. Employers want employees who understand the world. The International Relations Program at Penn is consistently ranked in the top five programs nationally and is widely respected for its selectivity and commitment to excellence. Our interdisciplinary training across history, politics, economics, and regions is highly valued by the commercial and public sectors for its rigorous but practical content and adaptable skills. Our thesis requirement proves your research and analytical skills. An exceptional part of the major’s experience is our busy schedule of visiting lectures, recruiting events, instructional simulations, annual trips to New York and D.C., and other extracurricular events. We also host the national honors society (Sigma Iota Rho) for international relations and publish the national peer-reviewed Journal of International Relations. Our graduates easily find jobs at the highest levels in every possible sector from business consulting to foreign service and go on to further training at the best professional and graduate schools.
The International Relations major is a multi-disciplinary course of study on the ways in which people, private groups, and sovereign governments interact with each other on the international stage. States are inevitably the main focus of analysis. However, the emergence of non-state actors–international organizations, multinational corporations, and private groups ranging from religious and peace groups to terrorist organizations–is an important feature of international affairs in our time. Thus, an understanding of the broader political environment as defined by culture, demography, geography, and technology is essential to a sophisticated understanding of international affairs.
Our interdisciplinary approach to the study of international affairs reflects this reality. We encourage a hardheaded and nuanced study of the problem of relations across international boundaries of all kinds–from the traditional political boundaries to the recently salient boundaries of culture and religion.
Our plan for achieving this goal is twofold: First, to insist that our majors receive a firm grounding in the approach to knowledge used in the disciplines of political science, history, and economics; and second, to provide them maximum flexibility, particularly in their advanced course work and thesis, to specialize in disciplines and areas of the world of their own choosing.
This curriculum, if assiduously pursued, offers a well-rounded liberal arts education valuable in all walks of life. However, it is also designed to prepare our students for a broad array of careers. Our students have gone on to distinguished careers in business, law, government, military service, international organizations, non-governmental organizations, and academia.