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Students pursuing a Ph.D.
in certain departments may petition to add an emphasis in
Global Studies. The departments for which the emphasis is
available include anthropology, English, history, political
science, religious studies, and sociology. To be eligible
for admission to the Ph.D. emphasis, students must be admitted
to the Ph.D. program in one of the departments choosing
to offer this emphasis with their existing Ph.D. program
and petition successfully to add the optional emphasis.
The student’s dissertation
committee must have one member from a participating department
other than the student's own department. The student may
also elect a global emphasis for his or her department field/area/specialization
exam, if such an emphasis is offered within the department.
The Chair of the Coordinating Committee will determine when
the student has successfully completed all of the requirements
for the emphasis.
The
student’s dissertation must focus on a global studies topic
– i.e., it must in some way be concerned with transnational
social processes or forces. Petitions for adding the emphasis
can be made at any time in a student’s graduate career,
but typically will be made after at least one successful
year of study in the home department. Work completed prior
to admission in the emphasis that meets emphasis requirements
(as determined by the Coordinating Committee) can be counted
towards completion.
To
satisfy the PhD emphasis in global studies, students
are required to take four one-quarter graduate level courses.
One course is an introductory gateway seminar offered by
the Global and International Studies Program. Three additional
courses must be chosen from among qualifying global theory
and global issues courses offered by participating departments.
At least one of these three courses must be on global theory,
and at least one must be on global issues. Normally, at
least one of these three courses will be taken from the
student’s home department, and at least two must be taken
from another participating department; students may petition
the Coordinating Committee if they have compelling reasons
to take two of the three courses in their home department.
Qualifying
global theory courses include Anthropology 227; English
236; History 200W; Political Science 270; Religious Studies
224 and 241; and Sociology 265C and 265SG. Qualifying global
issues courses include Anthropology 213, 214, 216, and 225;
English 234 and 235; History 232A-B; Political Science 225,
226, 275, 594PE; and Sociology 218CP, 218T, 231, 265, 265GS,
and 265W. (In a few instances the content of these courses
may vary with the instructor; in those cases, the Chair
of the Coordinating Committee will determine whether the
course is sufficiently transnational in orientation to qualify
for the Ph.D. emphasis.)
For
additional information, please contact the graduate advisor
in one of the participating departments or Global Studies.
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