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The graduate program focusing on Ottoman Empire and Middle Eastern studies provides specialized training in both Ottoman and contemporary Middle Eastern history, spanning from the 15th century to modern times. The OEME field's geographic coverage includes Southeast Europe, the Eastern Mediterranean, the Black Sea region, Turkey, and the Arab world. This program goes beyond fixed geographic boundaries, adopting fluid spatial and temporal approaches that highlight evolving borders, cross-regional linkages, and the circulation of people, concepts, and artifacts across and beyond the Ottoman realm and contemporary Middle East. Stanford's OEME program prepares graduate students for meticulous empirical investigation, archival and manuscript analysis, and engagement with theoretical frameworks in early modern and modern historical studies. While students concentrate on specific themes, issues, regions, or eras within Ottoman and/or modern Middle Eastern history from a global perspective, they are also urged to cultivate comprehensive perspectives that encompass socioeconomic changes, political and institutional developments, cultural dynamics, gender studies, and the interplay between human societies and their environments. The OEME discipline additionally facilitates student research incorporating digital humanities methodologies. Typically, doctoral candidates complete their degree requirements within four to six years, with individual timelines influenced by prior academic background and the specific linguistic and research demands of their chosen specialization.