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The Social Policy PhD program caters to those passionate about studying economic disparities, urban and spatial segregation, financial hardship, evolving family dynamics, racial diversity and migration, educational opportunities and standards, political disparities and civic engagement, as well as comparative and institutional analyses of welfare systems, with a focus on the United States and Western Europe.
Program participants have explored diverse research topics such as household labor distribution patterns, equity concerns and identity politics in American governance and jurisprudence, along with racial factors in societal hierarchy.
The programs do not focus in any sustained way on social policy in the developing world. While it may be possible to combine study of developing countries in the disciplinary department—government or sociology—with the analytic framework acquired in social policy, the social policy curriculum itself focuses almost exclusively on the issues and experiences of advanced industrial countries.
Students gain admission to the program in a two-stage process of review by both a multidisciplinary admissions committee in social policy and the admissions committee of the relevant disciplinary department. From the very beginning of their graduate careers, then, students are regarded as future contributors to the advancement of scholarship in their home discipline, as well as emerging leaders at the intersection of disciplinary boundaries in the study of social policy.
Applicants must receive a minimum score of 80 for the TOEFL, and it is not common for applicants to be admitted with TOEFL scores below 90. The minimum IELTS Academic score is 6.5. Some programs may require higher scores. Application Deadline: Dec 1.