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The special strength of the Committee on International Relations (CIR), the
first graduate program of its kind in the nation, lies in its interdisciplinary
approach to a wide range of questions relating to international issues. The
committee's faculty includes members of the various departments in the Division
of the Social Sciences, as well as the Graduate School of Business, the Irving
B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies, and the Law School. Their
expertise extends over a broad range of subjects currently structured into
eight programs of study: international relations theory, security studies,
international political economy, international history, history and conduct of
U.S. foreign policy, international law and organization, international
development, and regional international relations.
Joint B.A./M.A. Program. Qualified students in the College interested in
pursuing a joint Master of Arts degree in international relations should
consult with their College advisers and with a CIR preceptor early in their
third year of residence in the College. They will be expected to have a grade
point average of at least 3.7, to have completed most of their Common Core
requirements, and to have chosen their College concentration program. By the
end of their third year, students should also have completed at least three
courses that qualify as CIR requirements.
Application. Interested students should submit their formal application to
the program by the January 5 deadline for regular graduate admissions.
Applications should be submitted to the dean of students of the Division of the
Social Sciences (F 105). Space in the CIR B.A./M.A. program is limited, and
admission is very competitive. The application will be evaluated by the CIR
chairman and preceptors on the basis of the student's academic record, letters
of recommendation, GRE scores if available, a ten- to twenty- page term or
research paper, and a personal statement of intellectual and academic goals.
Admission to the M.A. program is also subject to approval by the College.
B.A./M.A. students enter joint residence status for the three quarters
preceding the anticipated quarter of graduation, during which time they will be
charged tuition at graduate rates.
Program Requirements. Students selected to participate in the joint degree
program fulfill all the normal B.A. requirements for their particular field of
concentration as well as all the Common Core requirements. In addition, joint
degree students in international relations will need to satisfy the following
requirements:
1. Completion of nine graduate-level courses for quality grades, including
seven CIR-approved courses. Students may petition the CIR to count toward their
M.A. degree up to three appropriate graduate-level courses taken for their B.A.
degree.
2. Fulfillment of the CIR distribution requirement that is designed to ensure
that, within the nine required courses for the M.A. degree, students achieve
sufficient depth and breadth in the study of international relations.
Currently, each student must pass two courses in each of three fields of
international relations:
a. International Relations Theory (Subfields: international
relations theory, security studies, and international political
economy).
b. International History and Law (Subfields: international
history, history and conduct of U.S. foreign policy, and international
law and organization).
c. International Development and Regional Studies (Subfields:
international development and regional international relations, including such
areas as Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America).
3. A passing grade on the foreign language reading examination.
4. Completion of an M.A. paper that is approved by a faculty adviser.
For a program brochure and further information, students should contact the
committee office (P 307).
RALPH A. AUSTEN, Professor, Department of History and the College
JOHN W. BOYER, Professor, Department of History and the College; Dean of the
College; Chairman, Council on Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social
Sciences
JAMES FEARON, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College
SHEILA FITZPATRICK, Professor, Department of History and the College
MICHAEL E. GEYER, Professor, Department of History and the College
CHARLES GLASER, Associate Professor, Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public
Policy Studies
GIDON A. G. GOTTLIEB, Leo Spitz Professor, the Law School
D. GALE JOHNSON, Eliakim Hastings Moore Distinguished Service Professor
Emeritus, Department of Economics and the College
BARRY D. KARL, Norman and Edna Freehling Professor, Department of History and
the College
FRIEDRICH KATZ, Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor, Department of
History and the College
RASHID KHALIDI, Associate Professor, Departments of Near Eastern Languages
& Civilizations and History and the College
DAVID LAITIN, Professor, Department of Political Science and the College;
Director, Center for the Study of Politics, History, and Culture
CHARLES LIPSON, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College; Chairman, Committee on International Relations
JOHN J. MEARSHEIMER, Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College
MICHAEL MUSSA, William H. Abbott Professor, Graduate School of Business
WILLIAM L. PARISH, Professor, Department of Sociology and the College
LLOYD I. RUDOLPH, Professor, Department of Political Science and the College
DUNCAN SNIDAL, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College
NATHAN TARCOV, Professor, Department of Political Science, Committee on Social
Thought, and the College; Cochairman, Committee on Social Thought STEPHEN WALT, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College
DALI YANG, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and the
College
MARVIN ZONIS, Professor, Graduate School of Business and the College
Go to: Faculty
International Relations
Committee Chairman: Charles Lipson, P 418B, 702-8053
Preceptors: James Marquardt, Jennifer Mitzen, Monica Toft, P 307,
702-8073, cir1@cicero.spc.uchicago.edu
Faculty
ROBERT Z. ALIBER, Professor, Graduate School of Business