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The master's program in Criminology with a specialization in Feminist and Gender Studies offers three different pathways:
Thesis option (30 credits, 120-page thesis). Alongside required criminology courses and two gender/feminist studies courses, students develop theoretical and methodological expertise through a thesis project and two elective criminology courses (one may be substituted with a graduate FEM course). (Note: These electives can alternatively be a field placement and seminar if available. Direct admission to this option is not permitted).
Major Research Paper option (24 credits, 50-page paper). This path includes one core criminology course, two gender/feminist studies courses, a major research project, and three criminology electives (one potentially replaced by a graduate FEM course).
Course-based option (24 credits). This stream requires one criminology core course, two gender/feminist studies courses, plus five criminology electives (with possible substitution of one graduate FEM course).
All three pathways provide students with comprehensive understanding of criminology's key theories and methods, enabling critical analysis and application to crime, justice, and social control issues - whether through coursework or internship opportunities. The program additionally incorporates feminist and gender studies perspectives.
The collaborative Feminist and Gender Studies master's program welcomes students from various disciplines (arts, education, health sciences, law, social sciences, and counseling/spirituality at Saint Paul University) interested in integrating feminist perspectives with their primary field. Participants earn their master's degree in their main discipline with a "specialization in Feminist and Gender Studies" designation.