Government
graduate fieldoverview
degree offered
- Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Degree | academic degree
area of concentration
- American Politics | major concentration
- Comparative Politics | major concentration
- International Relations | major concentration
- Political Methodology | minor concentration
- Political Thought | major concentration
- Public Policy | minor concentration
people
field members
- Anderson, Christopher J | Professor
- Bensel, Richard F | Professor
- Berezin, Mabel M. | Associate Professor
- Buck-Morss, Susan | Director of Visual Studies
- Bunce, Valerie Jane | Professor
- Carlson, Allen R. | Associate Professor
- Cook, Maria L | Associate Professor
- Enns, Peter | Assistant Professor
- Evangelista, Matthew Anthony | Professor
- Frank, Jason | Assistant Professor
- Herring, Ronald J | Professor
- Jones-Correa, Michael | Professor
- Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod | Professor
- Katzenstein, Peter Joachim | Professor
- Kirshner, Jonathan David | Professor
- Kramnick, Isaac | Professor
- Lowi, Theodore J | Professor
- Martin, Sherry L. | Assistant Professor
- Mertha, Andrew | Associate Professor
- Mettler, Suzanne Bridget | Professor
- Morgan, Sydney V. | Visiting Assistant Professor
- Morrison, Kevin McDonald | Assistant Professor
- Nee, Victor | Goldwin Smith Professor
- Patel, David Siddhartha | Assistant Professor
- Pepinsky, Thomas | Assistant Professor
- Reppy, Judith V | Professor
- Roberts, Kennith | Professor
- Rubenstein, Diane S. | Professor
- Sanders, Mildred Elizabeth | Professor
- Shefter, Martin Allen | Professor
- Smith, Anna Marie | Professor
- Tarrow, Sidney G | Professor
- Turner, Lowell | Professor
- Uphoff, Norman Thomas | Prof Emeritus
- van de Walle, Nicolas | Professor
- Way, Christopher Robert | Associate Professor
library liaison
- Thitchener, Lynn M | Senior Assistant Librarian
affiliations
has affiliated organization
- American Studies Program | academic program office
- Center for the Environment (CFE) | former research center
- Center for the Study of Economy and Society (CSES) | research center
- Collective Bargaining Labor Law and Labor History (ILRCB) | Cornell department
- Cornell Institute of Public Affairs (CIPA) | academic program office
- Institute for African Development | research institute
- Institute for European Studies | research institute
- International and Comparative Labor (ILRIC) | Cornell department
- International Programs (IP/CALS) | academic program office
- Peace Studies Program (PSP) | academic program office
- Philosophy (PHIL) | Cornell department
- School of Industrial and Labor Relations (ILR) | Cornell college
- Science and Technology Studies (S&TS) | Cornell department
- Sociology (SOC) | Cornell department
Students are expected to acquire a thorough knowledge of the discipline, including substantial theoretical, conceptual, and substantive competence in a major subject; to provide a clear demonstration of the methodological, linguistic, and other skills needed to conduct original scholarly research; and to acquire at least one semester's experience as a teaching assistant. Students who have not had equivalent course work are expected to take three of the four field seminars in the major subjects.
Numerous interdisciplinary programs are available, and include the Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research, the Peace Studies Program, the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, and various area programs.
Early in their first semester, doctoral students meet with the director of graduate studies and several faculty members to discuss the first year's program. At the end of the first year, students form their Special Committee, which guides and supervises subsequent academic preparation and dissertation research.
By the end of the third year of residence, or sooner if possible, students are expected to have taken the Admission to Candidacy examination. The exam is given in three parts: a written exam in the student's major and minor subjects; an extended research paper in the student's specialized field of interest; and an oral exam conducted by the Special Committee. The written exam is normally taken before the end of the second year; the oral exam, at the beginning of the third. At the oral exam, the student presents a thesis proposal outlining the hypothesis, data, methods, and resources needed to carry out the dissertation research.