We've designed this course with many
things in mind. One is that we want to
share our real-world experience with our
students. The team here is very
interdisciplinary, we are very field-
based, we've worked on a number of active
investigations of missing persons and
genocide around the world and we want to
ensure that our students have the most
up-to-date information about real-world
scenarios as well as the opportunity to
engage in those active field projects.
So, that's what makes this really unique.
You're going to have students from
history and archaeology, forensic science
all mixing and engaging and discussing
the course. Also it's going to be taught
by world leading experts in their field.
So, Holocaust archaeology is a pioneering
discipline that we started here at the
Centre of Archaeology. So, we apply these
techniques to sites all over Europe.
Students will do classroom-based
research that's cutting edge but
they'll also get the opportunity to
apply archaeological field skills all
around the world. There's really nobody
else doing what we're doing at the moment.
We really are world-leading,
pushing this forward so the students
have an opportunity to work 
on real active cases
taught by real 
specialists in their field.
 
