Watson Institute for International Studies
 

 

 
Graduate Program in Development
(GPD)

 

A PhD with a Difference

The Case for Interdisciplinary Training in Development

Admissions

Course Requirements

Non-Course Requirements

Sequencing and Time to Completion

Financial Awards

Faculty with Research Interests in Development

Courses Currently Offered

Course Requirements

GPD provides graduate students in traditional departments with multidisciplinary training, which gives them unique qualifications with respect to their peers in other universities. To achieve this advantage, they complete five courses, including four outside the Fellow's home department:

  • 1 disciplinary foundational course
    A course on development within the fellow’s home department
  • 2-semester interdisciplinary core course
    DS 200-201: Theory and Research in Development
    DS 200 explores the range of theoretical perspectives on development across the four disciplines. DS 201 examines substantive debates in development and is organized around a comprehensive selection of cross-disciplinary research traditions and techniques. DS 201 is designed to assist fellows in preparing preliminary dissertation proposals (or, in the case of Economics students, a research agenda).
  • 1 economics course
    Economic development, international economics, or other relevant course
    (Note: EC 111 or 121 is usually a prerequisite)
  • 1 elective from outside the home department (examples listed in the following table)
Sociology
Political Science
Anthopology
Economics
Soc 215: Socio-Economic Analysis of Development

Soc 297-02:
Democracy and Civil Society in the Developing World

PS 209: Readings in Comparative Politics

PS213: Proseminar in International Relations Theory

AN 204: Ideology of Development

AN 237: Colonialism and Neocolonialism

EC 251: Development Economics



 

Updated February 26, 2004

 

 
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