Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
UTVB3003 Introduction to the Development Enterprise Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- En introduksjon til utviklingsindustrien
- Weight
- 15.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2025/2026
- Course history
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- Curriculum
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FALL 2025
- Schedule
- Programme description
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Introduction
[Internt: Starting 2024/2025, this course is expanded to 15 ETCS, integrating key contents from the then-terminated UTVB3130 Recent trends in development assistance]
The Faculty of Education and International Studies at Oslo Metropolitan University offers interdisciplinary courses leading to a Bacherlor's degree of 180 ECTS credits in Development Studies. This course on is at the intermediate level and represents a 15 ECTS credits module in the 5th semester of the Bachelor programme.
If there are non-Scandinavian exchange students at the course, it will be taught in in English.
The succeful completion of this course is a prerequisite for students wanting to apply for UTVB3901 Hospitering i utviklingsindustrien - med bacheloroppgave, in the sixth semester.
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Required preliminary courses
Se emneplan under for beskrivelse av studiet.
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Learning outcomes
LEARNING OUTCOMES
At the end of the course the student has obtained the following learning outcome in terms of knowledge, skills and general competence:
Knowledge
The student
- has knowledge of key types of development interventions - including official aid; policy coherence for development; advocacy and transnational activism; and corporate social responsibility.
- has knowledge of key tendencies in the organization and aims of current development assistance - including new donors; coordination under the Sustainable Development Goals; the integration of aid with other global concerns (security, environment, and commerce) - and the overarching imperative of ensuring aid effectiveness.
- has knowledge of how the development enterprise, as a field of practice, may be systematically and critically studied
Skills
The student
- has the ability to critically discuss various types of aid development interventions and trends
- understands the ethical challenges in the field of practice and in the study of this field
General competence
The student can
- identify and make use of relevant literature in discussion of topics in the field
- can give both written and oral presentations of a topic in the field, based on sound social sciences method
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Content
CONTENTS
- Main features of the global aid industry: Actors and channels of finance; geographic and thematic destinations of aid; paradigms in and major debates about aid.
- Norwegian aid in perspective: Features of public development policy from the 1980s and up to the present, in comparative perspective; the approach and work of select non-governmental organisations.
- New actors, interventions and partnership types: Developing country donors; policy coherence and coordination including SDGs; advocacy and transnational activism; and corporate social responsibility.
- 21st century trends: «Securitization», «environmentalization» and «commercification» of aid; effectiveness, evaluability and result based management in aid.
- The politics of representation: The ways in which main actors in the development enterprise present development challenges; their own work and contributions; and the debates this gives rise to.
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Teaching and learning methods
LEARNING METHODS
Lectures on the curriculum, along with student-led seminars. In seminars students work in groups where they discuss given seminar assignments. In each group, a student is assigned to write a report on the seminar discussion. If exchange students attend the course, lectures and seminars will be held in English.
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Course requirements
REQUIREMENTS
Students may sit exam only if the following requirements are met:
- Submitting two individual seminar assignments - each being a 2-page report of a seminar group discussion. Assignments are graded pass/fail.
- Attending at least 70% of seminars.
The purpose of the above is to ensure that students engage actively with the curriculum during the course, and share insights and reflections with each other. Self-study cannot substitute for the imparting of knowledge and learning through class-room activity, and group-based and student-led learning is of particular importance. The individual student must be present in the seminars in which s/he is tasked with writing reports.
Students attending less than 50% of seminars automatically forfeit the right to sit exam, no matter the reason for absence.
A student who fails the 70% attendance requirement, or who fails to submit his/her reports by deadline - but does have legitimate grounds for such failure - may request an additional assignment: a paper of 2,000 words, on a title given by the teacher, to be submitted within 72 hours of issue. The same applies to a student who does submit her/his reports in time, but does not pass.
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Assessment
ASSESSMENT
30 minutes’ individual oral examination. The student randomly draws 6 assignments from a basket containing all those discussed in seminars, and then selects 3 out of the 6 for examination.
New/postponed exam:
In case of failed exam or absence on legitimate grounds, the student can apply for a new or postponed exam. New/postponed exam is offered within a reasonable time span following the regular exam. The student is responsible for applying for a new/postponed exam as per the regulations set by OsloMet.
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Permitted exam materials and equipment
None.
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Grading scale
A graded scale from A to E for passed, and F for not passed.
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Examiners
The exam is assessed by internal and external examiner/s.
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Target group and admission
The course is open to third-year Bachelor students in Development Studies at HiOA, and exchange students. Exchange students must have completed at least a one-year introductory course in Development Studies.
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Course contact person
Simon Pahle.