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The anthropology program provides a well-rounded and adaptable curriculum featuring academic coursework and research options across cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, archaeology, and biological anthropology. This discipline helps illuminate intricate questions about human behavior, biology, language, social structures, and humanity's interaction with surrounding environments. Field, laboratory, and library-based investigations focus on historical and contemporary ways of life, tracing the origins and distribution of global populations and cultures, with particular emphasis on the circumpolar North.
At the graduate level, the program offers comprehensive training in anthropology. This foundation equips master's graduates to pursue doctoral studies, teach anthropology at secondary or undergraduate levels, or enter government roles where anthropological knowledge is valuable. Many anthropology graduate students gain fieldwork experience in Alaska. Field and laboratory work is mandatory for all students, tailored to their specific subdiscipline.
While the Ph.D. program primarily concentrates on the circumpolar North, students and faculty also engage in research across Asia, Oceania, and other parts of the Americas. Doctoral candidates can specialize in any of anthropology's four major subfields.