Location | Email Address | Program Website |
---|---|---|
6th Floor Ross Building | arorap@yorku.ca, jsarra@yorku.ca | political-science.gradstudies.yorku.ca |
The Graduate Program in Political Science is designed to provide students with a broad training in political science and an opportunity for study in cognate fields. Courses will be offered in five fields: political theory; Canadian politics; international relations; comparative politics; and women and politics.
Research Facilities
The Graduate Program in Political Science takes an interdisciplinary approach to the study of politics and is committed to critical thinking and political change. Among its particular focuses are critical political economy; critical social theory; critical global politics; feminist politics; the history of political thought; social movements and social justice; theories of power; and justice and democracy.
It features Graduate Diplomas in Democratic Administration as well as the Graduate Diploma in International & Security Studies.
Graduate program professors and graduate students are associated with such independent research institutes at York as the Centres for Asian Research, Feminist Research, Global Labour Research, Refugee Studies, Research on Latin America & the Caribbean, and the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies.
The York University libraries have a comprehensive set of journals and government documents. The Institute for Social Research, one of the largest university-based survey research centres in Canada, provides expert consulting in social statistics and teaches a range of short courses on statistics and social research.
York University has established a distributed computing environment based upon networks connecting a variety of specialized servers. Students have access to Air York Plus which is a wireless internet connection and can access their email from this service and other high-end software required for the downloading of research materials. Political Science provides some computers for the use of graduate students. As well there is access to other computer laboratories on campus such as the William Small Centre Computing Commons, Scott Library and Stedman Library computer classrooms.
Application Procedure
Since the number of places is limited, students should apply as early as possible, according to the deadline and procedures specified on the Graduate Admissions website: http://futurestudents.yorku.ca/graduate/programs.
Graduate Diploma in Democratic Administration
Students may specialize formally in the area of Democratic Administration. The diploma is awarded concurrently with the master’s or doctoral degree for which the student is registered. Students must complete the core course for the diploma, Political Science 6155 3.0: Democratic Administration. For more information, including all diploma requirements, please see the “Graduate Diploma in Democratic Administration” page.
Graduate Diploma in International & Security Studies
The Graduate Diploma in International & Security Studies provides master’s and doctoral students the opportunity to specialize in the area of international and security studies, and to have this specialization noted on their transcripts. All requirements for the graduate diploma and relevant degree, either master’s or doctoral, must be fulfilled before the graduate diploma is awarded. For more information, including all diploma requirements, please see the “Graduate Diploma in International & Security Studies” page.