Job profile
With a Master’s degree in Erasmus Mundus, you are well equipped to work with internationally oriented journalism, and depending on your specialisation and your main subject, you are also qualified to undertake a number of other functions. Your career opportunities are, for example:
- Journalist: You can take on conventional journalism jobs and functions such as an editor or staff member in specialised departments in Denmark and abroad.
- Communication officer and media adviser: The degree programme also qualifies you to undertake information and press functions in (international) private and public sector companies.
- Intermediator: With your background in journalism, you can communicate your specialised knowledge at a high level within the academic world.
- Teacher: You can teach students and researchers how to communicate their academic knowledge, and teach people in the media world how to participate in academic debates.
Competence profile
An Erasmus Mundus Master’s degree gives you competences in the following areas:
- Communication: You are familiar with journalistic theory and practice and have a high level of specialised knowledge, and can therefore communicate with all target groups in both the media branch and the academic world.
- Teaching and consultancy: You are used to working with journalism in interdisciplinary and intercultural environments, and can use your journalistic and academic background to teach and advise many different target groups.
- Intercultural experience: You have experience with working in international environments and are used to speaking other languages than your own mother tongue. You are therefore qualified to take on jobs in international companies and organisations.
- Globalisation: You are familiar with the political, economic, social and cultural aspects of globalisation and are able to use this knowledge in both journalistic and academic contexts.
- Analysis: As an Erasmus Mundus graduate, you are familiar with theories about national, global, political and cultural conditions and can analyse the role these theories play within the media and journalism.