PhD Program Page

About the PhD Program in Global Studies

Global Studies is an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding globalization as a multidimensional, multi-level and historical process. Global Studies bridges social science and humanistic approaches to analyze the social, cultural, political, environmental, and economic consequences of global flows, institutions, and processes. Global Studies scholarship is motivated by engagement with contemporary transnational social problems across multiple theoretical perspectives and methodologies.

Our graduate students work closely with 17 core Global Studies faculty in conjunction with over 20 Affiliated Faculty members from across the campus, providing access to a wide variety of scholarship and expertise. The regional, disciplinary, and methodological background and research focus of our faculty provide a good guide to the areas of graduate study most suitable to pursue in Global Studies at UCSB. Prospective applicants should focus on full-time, tenure-stream faculty who will be in residence during your intended period of study as potential mentors and advisors.

Our programs share an academic core, and are distinguished by their relative emphases. The academic core of both programs combines multi-method research training with study in three related areas of specialization:

• Global Political Economy and Development
• Global Cultures and Ideology
• Global Governance

The online application for the upcoming academic year will be available to prospective applicants in early September. Please use the Admissions link for detailed information and useful application links.

 

Recent Awards

 

2023 Global Studies PhD Field Grants and Dissertation Awards (funded via the Global Studies Department)

  • Jahan Ahmed  (Advisor: Distinguished Professor Mark Juergensmeyer)
    • Project: Two Nations Under God: American Islamism in Cold War Pakistan
  • Brett Aho  (Advisor: Distinguished Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse)
    • Project: Understanding Stakeholder Influence in European Digital Policymaking
  • James Altman (Advisor: Distinguished Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse)
    • Project: Research on Nationality Policies in East African Government Archives
  • Christina Guirguis  (Advisor: Professor Paul Amar)
    • Project: Potty Politics
  • Ishleen Kaur  (Advisor: Professor Satyajit Singh)
    • Project: Enhancing Women's Participation in WASH and Climate Change Interventions in Rural India and South Africa
  • Swaroopa Lahiri (Advisor: Professor Aashish Mehta)
    • Project: Erratic Rain, Exiting Men: Female Farm Operators and the Shifting Agricultural Landscape in Rural India
  • Mariah Miller  (Advisor: Distinguished Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse)
    • Project: Comparing Social Enterprises in Chengdu, China; Barcelona, Spain; and San Francisco, USA
  • Faryal Nadeem  (Advisor: Emeritus Professor Mark Juergensmeyer)
    • Project: The Case of Spectacular Acts of Violence Amidst the Rise of TLP