BASIC COMPETENCES
CB1 - Be able to show that they possess and comprehend facts and contents in an area of study which, based on a previous general secondary school level, have been extended to those included in advanced textbooks and in some aspects proceed from the most advanced studies in this area.
CB2 - Be able to show that they have learned how to apply their knowledge in a critical perspective, placing theoretical knowledge in the context of their future jobs or tasks and that they possess the competences needed to develop and defend arguments and solve problems in that area of study.
CB3 - Be able to show that they are capable of collecting and interpreting the relevant data (normally within their area of study) needed for formulating judgments which require critical thought on social, scientific and ethical topics of relevance.
CB4 - Be able to show that they are able to transmit information, ideas, problems and solutions both to specialized and non-specialized publics.
CB5 - Be able to show that they have developed the learning skills required to perform further studies with a high degree of self-dependence.
GENERAL COMPETENCES
CG1 - Understand social, political, legal and economic realities from a comparative perspective.
CG2 - Be able to approximate and analyze the issues of equal opportunities, multi-cultural society, political ideological and cultural pluralism, human rights, and the international community from the normative perspective developed by legal and political theory.
CG3 - Be able to debate and formulate critical reasoning, using precise terminology and specialized resources, when analyzing international and global phenomena, employing both the concepts and knowledge from different disciplines as well as the methods of analysis, paradigms and concepts pertaining to the Social Sciences.
CG4 - Be able to apply scientific method to the economic, social and political questions of a global society; be able to formulate problems in this context, identify a possible explication or solution, and a method to contrast them by sensibly interpreting the data.
OVERLAPPING COMPETENCES
CT1 - Acquire the capacity to communicate knowledge in oral and written form, both to specialized and to non-specialized publics.
CT2 - Acquire the capacity to establish good interpersonal communication and to work both in interdisciplinary and international teams.
CT3 - Acquire the capacity to organize and plan workloads, taking correct decisions based on the available information, collecting and interpreting relevant data in order to provide assessments in that area of study.
CT4 - Develop the motivation and capacity to perform independent continuous learning for life, with an endowment to adapt to change and new situations.
SPECIFIC COMPETENCES
CE1 - Understand the main social and political dynamics which generate inequality in contemporary societies and its consequences, and comprehend the principles on which equal opportunity policies are based.
CE2 - Be familiar with the principal theories of social and political justice
CE3 - Be familiar with and understand the different layers of inequality that arise in the global society.
CE4 - Be familiar with and understand the legal framework of Human Rights, as an institutional guarantee against inequalities at national and supra-national level.
CE5 - Be able to analyze and compare contemporary policies from the specific perspective of inequality.
CE6 - Be able to critically relate present and past events and processes that foster inequality.
CE7 - Be able to formulate basic economic, social, political problems of justice in an international context.
CE8 - Be able to carry out case studies and apply comparative method to analyze institutions, processes and policies in different countries.
CE9 - Understand the consequences of inequality
LEARNING OUTCOMES
· Knowledge of the academic literature on social justice with a special focus on the many kinds of inequality in a globalized world.
· Knowledge of the academic literature on social stratification in contemporary and understanding of empirical evidence compared societies.
· Applied knowledge to understand the role of the family, gender issues, political participation, education systems and labor markets in social inequality.