Difference between revisions of "Regional studies"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
(not a major, not a university component)
Line 23: Line 23:
 
*[[East Asia Regional Studies Program]]
 
*[[East Asia Regional Studies Program]]
 
*[[Russia, Eurasia, and Eastern Europe Regional Studies Program]]
 
*[[Russia, Eurasia, and Eastern Europe Regional Studies Program]]
 
  
 
[[Category:Regional studies|*]]
 
[[Category:Regional studies|*]]
[[Category:Majors]]
 
 
[[Category:Academic trends]]
 
[[Category:Academic trends]]
[[Category:University components]]
 

Revision as of 11:53, 12 December 2013

Regional studies at Columbia integrate a variety of fields into the interdisciplinary study of various geographic regions. The regional studies trend took off after World War II and heightened with decolonisation. It has since died down, but remains a potent force in academic research.

Undergraduates at Columbia may major or concentrate in the study of various regions, in programs managed by the various regional studies institutes. Graduate students have a number of masters programs available to them in regional studies.

Regional studies institutes

Columbia has seven institutes which serve as faculty clusters and research centers for various regions of the world, and several additional regionally-related research centers. Although many are formally affiliated with SIPA, their purpose, by and large, is to reach out and engage the rest of the university, as well. They include:

Regional studies programs

Not sure if these are active or inactive: