Graduate Programs in Economic,
Political and Policy Sciences
Faculty
Professors: Sheila Amin Gutiérrez De Piñeres, Daniel Arce, Kurt J. Beron,
Brian JL Berry (Dean), Thomas Brunell, Anthony
M. Champagne, Marie Isabelle
Chevrier, Harold D.
Clarke,
Rachel Croson, Denis
Dean, Lloyd J. Dumas, Catherine Eckel, Euel
W Elliott (Senior Associate Dean), Daniel
Griffith,
Edward J. Harpham, Donald A. Hicks, Bruce Jacobs, Paul Jargowsky, L. Douglas Kiel,
Associate Professors: Bobby C. Alexander, Philip K. Armour, Nathan Berg, Simon Fass, Jennifer Holmes, Tomislav Kovandzic, Susan McElroy, Fang Qiu, Kevin Siqueira, Sheryl
Skaggs, Gregory S. Thielemann, Michael Tiefelsdorf, Lynne Vieraitis
Assistant Professors: Rodney Andrews, Paul Battaglio, Denise Pacquette-Boots, Patrick Brandt, Yongwan Chun, Chetan Dave, Jeremy Hall, Linda Camp Keith, Brandon Kinne, Youngjoo Lee, Li, Xin (Sherry),
Banks Miller, Robert Morris, Clint Peinhardt, Meghna Sabharwal, Sheryl Skaggs
Clinical Professors: Donald Arbuckle, Calvin
Jamison, Karen Jarrell, Kristin Klopfenstein, Stuart Murchison, Elmer Polk, Robert
Whelan
Clinical Associate Professors: Douglas Dow, Wendy Hassett
Clinical Assistant Professors: Kimberly Aaron, Timothy Bray, Kruti
Dholakia, Wenhua Di, Rodolfo Hernandez, Guerrero, Karen Jarrell, Sarah Maxwell, Nicolas Valcik
Research Professors: Tammy Leonard, Sonya Salamon
Professors Emeritus: Ronald Briggs, Irving J. Hoch
Adjunct
Associate Professors: Ernan Haruvi (joint
appointment with SOM)
Senior Lecturers: Brian Bearry, Teodoro Benavides,
Cliff Bowden, Karl Ho, Luba Ketsler, Heja Kim, Meryl Nason, Elmer Polk, Irina Vakulenko, Yuki Watanabe (joint
appointment with A&H)
There
is increasing awareness of the impact that rapid technological, economic and
social change is having on society. The graduate programs in the
Facilities
Students
have access to the computing facilities in the
Admission Requirements
The
University’s general admission requirements are discussed here.
All
programs require applicants to have a baccalaureate degree from an accredited
college or university, GRE or GMAT scores, transcripts and letters of
recommendation. Specific additional requirements are discussed for each program
in their respective sections below.
Prerequisites
The
details for each program are discussed in their respective sections below.
Students may be required to take courses to prepare them for coursework.
Research
The
Summary
The
School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences offers seven masters programs
and six Ph.D. programs. These programs and their credit hour requirements are
given below.
Master’s Programs
M.A. in Political Science -
Constitutional Law Studies (30 hours)
M.A. in Political Science in Legislative Studies (30 hours)
M.A. in Political Science (30 hours)
M.S. in Applied Sociology (36 hours)
M.S. in Criminology (36 hours)
M.S. in Economics (36 hours)
M.S. in Geospatial Information Sciences (30 hours)
M.S. in International Political Economy (36 hours)
Master of Public Affairs (42 hours)
Master of Public Policy (36 hours)
Ph.D. Programs
Criminology
Economics
Geospatial Information Sciences
Political Science
Public Affairs
Public Policy and Political Economy
All Ph.D. programs require 90 hours
beyond the baccalaureate degree. Applicants should contact their respective
program office to discuss possible transfer credit.
Graduate Certificate Programs
In addition to our degree programs
the School offers the following certificate programs for both degree and
non-degree seeking students.
City Planning
Crime and Justice Analysis
Economic and Demographic Data Analysis
Evaluation Research
Homeland Security
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
Local Government Management
Non-profit Management
Remote Sensing