Applied Ethics and Conflict Managementpart time, full time

  • Master of Arts

    Master
    Degree

  • 4 semesters

    Standard period of study (amount)

  • Jena

    Location

Overview and admission

Study Type

graduate

Admission semester

Winter Semester only

Area of study

Ethics

Focus

Medical Ethics, Business Ethics, Environmental Ethics and Bioethics, Sport Ethics, Media Ethics, Practical Ethics, Conflict

Target group

The degree course is aimed at graduates with a first vocational university degree in study programmes in Political Science, Philosophy, Theology, Pedagogy (Educational Science) or one that is equivalent to a Bachelor's degree in the amount of 180 credits and subject-related studies at a university or higher education institution in Germany or abroad.

Admission modus

open admission

Admission requirements (Link)

Admission requirements

The subject related requirement is proof of academic achievement in the field of political science, philosophy, theology or pedagogy (educational science) amounting to at least 120 credit points. International applicants are required to provide proof of command of German at the level of a DSH test (stage 2), a TestDaF (TDN 4) or a recognised equivalent.

Lecture period
  • 02.04.2024 - 05.07.2024
  • 14.10.2024 - 07.02.2025

Application deadlines

Winter semester (2024/2025)
  • Application deadline for Germans and inhabitants

    Application period winter semester: 01/04 - 15/09

  • Deadlines for International Students from the European Union

    Application period winter semester: 01/04 - 15/07

  • Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union

    Application period winter semester: 01/04 - 15/07

  • Enrollment deadline for Germans and foreign students

    Application period winter semester: 01/04 - 15/07 Application period summer semester: 01/12 - 15/01

Tuition fee

Languages of instruction

Main language

German

DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst - German Academic Exchange Service