MSc Digital and Technological Society
Bristol, United Kingdom
DURATION
1 up to 2 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time, Part time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
08 Aug 2025*
EARLIEST START DATE
Sep 2025
TUITION FEES
GBP 32,100 / per year **
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* home applicants / overseas applicants: 25 July 2025
** overseas full-time | home full-time: GBP 15,100 per year | home part-time two years: GBP 7,550 per year
Introduction
We are living through a period of dramatic transformation, where technological innovation is becoming a major sociopolitical concern. New social pressures, such as climate change, are driving technological upheavals in areas like energy and transport, while advancements in technologies such as artificial intelligence (but also, for example, the blockchain, genetic engineering, autonomous systems, augmented reality, reusable rockets, and more) have the potential to create new social pressures. These dynamics are already disrupting our established social orders, creating a spectrum of opportunities and dangers.
The interdisciplinary MSc in Digital and Technological Society is designed to provide students with the tools to grapple with these opportunities and dangers. Drawing on insights from disparate social sciences, it offers critical perspectives on, and interdisciplinary methods to research, the nature of technological change: the ways technology shapes society and the ways it is shaped by society. Students will study technologies not just as tools or artefacts, but as systems interwoven with social, cultural, political, and economic meaning and practice.
The curriculum draws heavily on scholarship around digital systems but is designed to address a wide range of technologies: emphasising generalisable insights into society's relationship with its creations. Different unit options offer the opportunity to engage with different facets of modern technological development. We will ask how our social expectations shape our technological choices; how our technological choices structure our social relations; how digital technologies are fostering new cultural and economic forms; how we might recognise and govern the risks of innovation; and many other questions.
The programme is designed to equip students with skills and knowledge that are highly sought after in the rapidly evolving technological and digital world. It takes advantage of the University of Bristol's broad expertise in the social study of technological systems. This expertise – exemplified by research centres such as the Bristol Digital Game Lab (BDGL), the Bristol Digital Futures Institute (BDFI), the ESRC Centre for Sociological Futures (CenSoF), the Jean Golding Institute for Data Research, and more – offers unique learning and networking opportunities for students.
Gallery
Admissions
Postgraduate Online Event
from 25th November 2024- 4th of December 2025
Curriculum
Year 1 (2025/26 entry cohort)
- Introduction to Digital and Technological Society
- Digital Methods and Data Skills
- Dissertation
Year 1 (2025/26 entry cohort) Part-time
- Introduction to Digital and Technological Society
- Digital Methods and Data Skills
Year 2 (2025/26 entry cohort) Part-time
- Dissertation
Program Tuition Fee
Career Opportunities
The programme aims to prepare graduates for leadership in a wide range of careers about the social, cultural, political and economic implications of technological change: from policymaking and analysis to industry and academia. The social questions arising from rapid technological change are becoming significant avenues for employment, and the curriculum is designed to prepare you to address these questions. It will equip you with the skills and knowledge to become a leader in all sectors (public, private, academic and not-for-profit) engaged in following, interpreting, and governing technological change.
Career skills are built into the entire programme, and opportunities will be provided to develop policy-relevant analytical expertise, communication skills, group working, and research capacities. Tailored events and interactions with leading research centres, such as the Bristol Digital Futures Institute, will enhance your academic experience while fostering potential employment prospects. Additional opportunities will be provided through speakers and events organised by the School of Sociology Politics and International Studies.
Program delivery
Duration
- One year full-time
- Two years part-time
Part-time study requires daytime weekday attendance.
Program Admission Requirements
Show your commitment and readiness for Grad school by taking the GRE - the most broadly accepted exam for graduate programs internationally.