Program Overview
The Department of Political Science offers two programs, a free-standing, one-year program leading to the Master of Arts degree in political science, and a program leading to the Doctor of Philosophy in political science, which is to be completed in no more than seven years. The graduate program of the Department of Political Science, a
division of Columbia University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, provides advanced study and research opportunities for students who intend to pursue careers in research, scholarship, teaching, and public life.
The department is organized into four major subfields: American politics, comparative politics, international relations, and political theory. Students select a major and minor field from among these, or they may minor in economics or research methods. All students in the department must fulfill a requirement in statistical, mathematical and analytical methods.
Study in American politics centers on political behavior, rational choice institutionalism, and historical institutionalism. Many American politics students choose research methods as their second field. Students majoring in comparative politics study theoretical and historical issues such as ethnicity and nationalism, political participation and culture in democratic and authoritarian regimes, transitions and consolidation of newly democratic regimes, and formal approaches to the design and comparison of institutions. International relations students and
faculty study almost the entire range of subjects in the field from NGOs and other nonstate actors, to the role of domestic politics, to the international system, using a similarly broad range of methodologies including interpretivist approaches to case studies, statistical analysis, and mathematical models. Our political theory faculty comprise one of the most distinguished groups of theorists to be found anywhere, having made leading contributions to the areas of normative political philosophy, constitutional issues and constitution-making processes, democratic theory, political psychology, the methodology of political inquiry, and the history of political thought.
Doctoral fellowships are awarded in recognition of academic achievement and in expectation of scholarly success. Teaching and research experience are considered an important aspect of the training of graduate students. Thus, graduate fellowships include some teaching and research apprenticeship.
Political science students regularly participate in the activities of the regional institutes of the School of International and Public Affairs, and research centers such as the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, the Earth Policy Center, the Center for the Study of Human Rights, the Institute for Research on Women and Gender, the International Conflict Resolution Program, and the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies.
The department is actively involved in the University-wide Columbia Public Policy Consortium, which is an interdisciplinary program that supports graduate teaching and doctoral research in public policy.
The department also participates fully in the interdisciplinary M.A. Program in Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences. This M.A. program trains students in how to apply quantitative methods to problems in the social sciences as they arise in business, government, and nonprofit organizations. The program draws on the diverse strengths of the statistics and social sciences faculties at Columbia and other institutions in the New York metropolitan area. It is designed for students with a strong background in social sciences or quantitative methods who are interested in deepening their analytical skills and broadening their knowledge of the social sciences.
Recent graduates of the Ph.D. program have obtained teaching positions at colleges and universities throughout the U.S. and abroad, and research and staff positions at organizations such as the American Enterprise Institute, the Asia Society, and the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs.
Recent M.A. graduates have applied their training to advance careers in journalism, business, applied research law, political activism and civil service. Others used the M.A. year to determine whether or not to enter a Ph.D. program in political science.
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The Four Subfields
The Department of Political Science is broadly organized into four
curricular subfields. These are American Politics, Comparative
Politics, International Relations, and Political Theory. Students in
the Doctoral program are required to choose from among these, except in
special circumstances, their major and minor fields of study. Students
in the Master's Only program must take courses in at least two
subfields to satisfy the degree requirements.
The
following section provides information on each of the major curricular
subfields as well as links to the economics and quantitative methods
subfields, which can be substituted for the minor by students in the
Doctoral program. Also listed are the names of the faculty members
whose specialties lie within each of the major subfields.
Organizing your studies
Graduate
students major in one of the fields of political science: American
Politics, Comparative Politics, International Relations, or Political
Theory. This usually means taking about six courses. In addition,
students minor in another field, which may include another subfield, as
well as Economics or Quantitative Methods. A minor usually involves
three to five classes. Finally, students receive additional breadth
through an additional field survey course.
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American Politics
The graduate program in American
Politics strives for excellence in three areas:
1) political behavior, 2)
rational choice institutionalism, and 3) historical institutionalism (American
Political Development). In each, Columbia scholars write and teach at the
cutting edge of the discipline. To a degree matched in few other departments,
the American Politics faculty cross boundaries with the other subfields of
Comparative Politics, International Relations, and Political Theory. Faculty
are also active in a variety of interdisciplinary centers at Columbia's
Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP), including the
American Institutions Project, the Applied Statistics Center, the Center for
Urban Research and Policy, and the Center on African American Politics and
Society. With additional faculty
strength that Barnard, the School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA),
Teachers College and the African-American, Latino, and Asian-American Studies
Programs, students have rich opportunities to pursue research in public policy,
urban politics, and race and ethnicity.
Distinguishing features of the
American Politics program are the uncommonly favorable faculty-student ratio
and the commitment of the faculty to intensive graduate teaching. Most students
in the program work with faculty on research projects, co-author papers,
present at conferences, and publish in the field's leading journals. The
faculty deploy advanced research methods, especially quantitative methods, game
theory and mathematical modeling, and historical analysis in their own work.
Students are strongly encouraged to master these techniques as quickly as
possible, and to continue honing their skills through additional study in
Columbia's exceptional History, Statistics, Economics, Sociology, and
Mathematics Departments, as well as SIPA and the Graduate School of Business.
Many American Politics students choose "Quantitative Methods" as their second
field.
Our many speaker series, run
jointly by students and faculty through ISERP, are a central part of
intellectual life in the subfield.
These workshops bring leading scholars from around the country to
present their latest research. There, they meet students in seminar and
continue discussions informally over lunch and dinner. Presently, American
Politics faculty and students are active participants in the following series:
African American Politics and
Society Workshop
American Politics Workshop
Center for Urban Research and
Policy Seminar Series
Political Economy Seminar
Workshop on 20th Century
American Politics and Society
Workshop on Political Psychology
Advanced students are also
encouraged to present their own work in workshops such as ISERP's Political
Economy Breakfast and the Applied Statistics Center Playroom.
Virtually all the program's recent
graduates are employed in teaching and research. Since 2004, graduates have accepted tenure-track positions
at the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Chicago,
Dartmouth College, Fordham University, the University of Houston, National
Chengchi University (Taiwan), Princeton University, Syracuse University, and
Washington University in St. Louis.
American Politics Resources
For federal government information, try browsing around in Fedworld. Thomas is a service for Congressional documents, with links to the Library of Congress. The US House of Representatives and US Senate have their own Web sites, and are sources legistative data. The White House has its own document service, as well as links to US government agencies. A comprehensive listing of state government information is also available from the Library of Congress.
Columbia University Libraries provides a gateway to its extensive data holdings through its DataGate service. Other excellent sources include the American National Election Studies, the Roper Center and the Pew Research Center.
American Politics Faculty
Rodolfo de la Garza
Robert Erikson
Ester Fuchs
Andrew Gelman
Fredrick Harris
Jeffrey Henig
Shigeo Hirano
Ira Katznelson
Jeffrey Lax
Robert Lieberman
Sharyn O'Halloran
Justin Phillips
Kenneth Prewitt
Robert Shapiro
Michael Ting
Dorian Warren
Gregory Wawro
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Comparative Politics
What is comparative politics at Columbia University?
Our goal is to train a new generation of leading comparativists who employ a clear understanding of current theoretical debates, cutting edge methodological techniques, and deep area knowledge to answer important substantive questions in the world today. Our approach is to use rigorous studies of political processes around the world to contribute to general debates at the heart of the subdiscipline: Why are politicians responsive to the needs of citizens in some countries but not in others? Why do people vote on ethnic lines in some places but not others? Why do some states guarantee social protection for their citizens whereas others leave it in the hands of the market? How do political institutions and social factors shape the provision of public goods? What role do property rights play in transitions to democracy and to market economies? Why does the extent of policy redistribution vary across countries and across policy areas?
Who are our comparative students?
Each year we accept a very small group of four or five students in comparative politics. These students are typically selected from a pool of over two hundred applicants. They receive full funding for five years, and receive advanced training in theory development, research methods, and data analysis. They take courses that address general issues in comparative politics and seminars that allow them to engage with the major debates studied in their region of interest. Our small class size means that students can work in a collegial and stimulating environment, engage closely with faculty, become involved with faculty projects, and receive strong support as they develop their own projects.
What kinds of projects do students pursue?
In recent years comparative politics students have joined faculty to work on several major projects. They have undertaken research in China, Ukraine, Mexico, Nigeria, Europe, India, Pakistan, Brazil, Georgia, Argentina, Iran, Turkey, Uganda, Congo, and Indonesia. They have conducted their own surveys, often under difficult circumstances, such as those involving rioters in Nigeria or rebels in Burundi. They have devised laboratory and field experiments, including efforts to understand elite persuasion in Zambia and voting behavior in Argentina. They have been among the first to develop and study major new datasets on patterns of voting, on ethnic cleavages, on political institutions, on social protection and redistribution, and on peacebuilding. They have developed game theoretic political economy models of clientelism, press freedom, and redistribution, and have employed cutting-edge statistical techniques to analyze data on citizen voting, district-level election returns, and newspaper coverage of corruption. They have labored in archives, interviewed political actors, and devised maps to study the regional distribution of resources. In short, Columbia students can be found all over the world using the best techniques to answer the most significant and difficult questions in comparative politics. They draw on support not only from the Department but also from Columbia’s extraordinary collection of area institutes (including those focused on Latin America, the Former Soviet Union and East-Central Europe, and Africa).
What is the comparative course work?
Students in comparative politics take the field seminar (POLS G6403, Issues in Comparative Politics) in their first semester to become acquainted with the literature in the subfield across a range of topics. They then take two to four substantive courses in comparative politics (focusing on the politics of major areas or on major themes in comparative politics) and other courses that fulfill Department requirements. They participate and serve as discussants in the Comparative Politics Seminar, where guest speakers and Columbia graduate students and faculty present work in progress. Developing a research paper for one of their courses is usually the first step toward completing their second-year paper, which is presented in a departmental conference and discussed by a faculty member following the format of APSA annual meetings. Most students also take the methods sequence and game theory in their first two years, and they apply their training to their papers and research. Many take additional courses in history, anthropology, economics or statistics. In August of their second year, students take their comprehensive exams, and in their third year they draft and defend their dissertation proposals.
How is the interaction of comparative graduate students and faculty?
Students typically work closely with two or three advisors and usually collaborate in their research projects. Often, collaboration moves beyond research assistance, and graduate students co-author papers with faculty members. In recent years collaborative faculty-student work has included studies of post-conflict development projects in Indonesia; research on the distributional consequences of social programs; surveys of employers and labor unions; studies on the effects of electoral competition, partisanship, and crisis on policymaking; studies of religion and voting; analyses of cabinet turnover; analyses of inequality across ethnic groups; and analyses of presidential power in the postcommunist world. Students are also active in the Comparative Politics Seminar, where outside speakers present their work in progress (with a graduate student discussant) and where graduate students present new work (with faculty discussants). These workshops focus on the substance of the projects and also train students for professional presentations and job talks. Students and faculty also attend several other seminars related to comparative politics—which are based on regional interest (such as the Political Economy of Latin America seminar), approaches to the discipline (such as the Political Economy Workshop), or topics (such as the NYU-Columbia seminar on ethnic politics).
What kind of jobs do students take?
Our students have accepted positions in leading universities in the United States and around the world. In the past five years, our students in comparative politics have been offered faculty positions at Chicago University, Michigan University, New York University, Northwestern University, Princeton University, Brown University, Ohio State University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Notre Dame, Rice, Florida State University, Williams College, Barnard College, Washington University, the University of London, Beijing University, and the National Autonomous University of Mexico. They have obtained post-doctoral fellowships at Harvard, Princeton, Oxford, and the London School of Economics, and research positions at institutions such SAIS, the Brookings Institutions, and Healthfirst.
Who are our comparative politics faculty members?
(Click their names to see their Web sites for more information.)
Curtis, Gerald
de la Garza, Rodolfo
Frye, Timothy
Goodhart, Lucy
Hirano, Shigeo
Huber, John
Humphreys, Macartan
Kasara, Kimuli
Katznelson, Ira
Mares, Isabela
Morelli, Massimo
Murillo, M. Victoria
Nathan, Andrew
Shimizu, Kay
Snyder, Jack
Stepan, Alfred
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International Relations
The students and faculty at Columbia
study almost the entire range of subjects of international politics,
from NGOs and other non-state actors, to the role of domestic politics,
to the international system. The range of methodologies is similarly
large, from interpretivist approaches to case studies to statistical
analyses and mathematical models. International security and political
economy are our particular strengths. Many students work with
historical materials and also study current problems.
The
faculty are all actively engaged in research; it is rare for a year to
go by without at least one book and several major articles by us.
Furthermore, we present this work to the students as we go along. If
you look at our books, you will see that the ideas and criticisms of
our students are gratefully acknowledged.
In addition to offering
more classes than any individual student will be able to take, we have
several speakers series and workshops. Many are ad hoc, but we have
continuing ones in political economy, security, and diplomatic history
and IR. The large size of our IR faculty means that students receive a
great deal of individual attention. Our former students are teaching at
most of the Ivy League universities and other leading schools.
International Relations Resources
There are also lots of resources in the field of International Relations. The International Political Economy Archive,
although still under construction, promises to be a significant source
of information in the field. It is also possible to access the United Nations, NATO, and the World Bank.
The Colorado Conflict Research Consortium
provides access to research materials on international conflict, as
well as to papers written in conjuction with the Harvard Program on
Nonviolent Sanctions.
The University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation has publications on security and strategic issues in the Middle East and Asia.
The Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy provides access to research papers and working papers in the sub-field of International Political Economy.
The Online Intelligence Project
contains information on commerce, defense, and security in Eastern
Europe, Africa, East Asia, Western Europe, Canada, Latin America, the
Middle East, and South Asia.
Diplonet is a web-site that contains information on issues related to post-war diplomacy.
The International Security Network Homepage provides links to information about conflict, security studies, and peace studies throughout the world.
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Political Theory
Columbia is home to one of the largest and
most distinguished groups of political theorists and philosophers of
law and politics to be found anywhere in the world in one institution.
Concentrated in the Department of Political Science but spreading
across several cognate departments and schools, including Philosophy,
Law, and History, the faculty has been at the forefront of scholarship
in a wide range of areas of Political Theory. Individual members of the
faculty have made leading and often groundbreaking contributions to the
areas of normative political philosophy, the study of constitutional
issues and constitution-making processes, democratic theory, legal
theory, political psychology, the methodology of political inquiry, and
the history of political thought, among others.
In addition to
an exceptionally rich and varied formal curriculum, graduate students
in Political Theory have access to numerous informal opportunities to
engage with some of the best thinkers in Political Theory today through
workshops and other fora. Especially noteworthy is the Columbia
Colloquium on Political Theory, which regularly brings faculty from
Columbia and other universities together with students under the
auspices of the Center for Law and Philosophy to discuss a variety of
issues in political and legal theory.
Recent Columbia Ph.D.’s
in political theory have been appointed to faculty positions in major
research universities, including departments that are currently ranked
among the ten best in the United States, as well as to positions in
highly regarded liberal arts colleges.
Political Theory Resources
For political theorists, the American Philosophical Association's gopher provides access to a preprint server as well as to many searchable classic texts. In addition, BEARS (Brown Electronic Article Review Service) provides reviews of recent articles in the fields of moral and political philosophy.
The
Perseus Project at Tufts University is a repository of useful
information on various aspects of ancient Greek literature and theory.
There is access to a very comprehensive body of Greek texts in translation. There is also an interesting collection of secondary texts on Thucydides, including Hobbes's On the Life and History of Thucydides, and Finlay's Three Essays on Thucydides.
The Hume Archives
at the University of Tennessee-Martin, provide access to a substantial
collection of Hume's texts, as well as to early biographies, and to
eighteenth century reviews of the philosopher's writings.
The Nietzsche Page at the University of Southern California contains information about various Nietzsche-related societies, the full text of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and an assortment of Nietzschean maxims.
The Augustine Page
at the University of Pennsylvania includes selections from the works of
St. Augustine (in Latin and also in English translation), as well as
papers written by participants in an on-line seminar.
The Marxism Page provides access to texts by Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Trotsky, as well as to contemporary Marxist writings.
The Spoon Collective
provides links to archives of papers and discussions on theorists
including Deleuze, Foucault, Habermas, Heidigger, Lyotard, and Marx.
Oxford University provides access to a significant collection of political theory texts, from the classical to the contemporary.
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The Fifth Subfield
Methodology training at Columbia
In
formal modeling and statistical methods, there are two tracks, one that
assumes no specific mathematical background and one that assumes
students have a basic level of mathematical training in calculus,
linear algebra and methods of proof. Students who wish to take the
mathematical courses but lack the training can take Political Science
4360 in their first semester. The core courses are listed below. Those
with a * are courses that assume students have a strong math background
(i.e., have taken W4360 or its equivalent).
Core Methods Courses in the Department of Political Science
W4360, Math Methods for Political Science
Provides
students in political science with a basic set of tools needed to
pursue advanced methods training in statistics and formal theory.
Topics include calculus, linear algebra, methods of proof, non-linear
programming and integration. Assumes students have basic knowledge of
algebra.
W4910, Quantitative Political Research
Introduction
to the use of quantitative techniques in political science and public
policy. Topics include descriptive statistics and principles of
statistical inference and probability through analysis of variance and
ordinary least-squares regression. Computer applications are
emphasized. No pre-requisite.
W4911, Analysis of Political Data
[Prerequisite:
W4910 or the equivalent.] Multivariate and time-series analysis of
political data. Topics include time-series regression, structural
equation models, factor analysis, and other special topics. Computer
applications are emphasized.
*W4912, Multivariate Political Analysis
[Prerequisite:
W4910 and W4360 or equivalent course preparation in math and
statistics.] More mathematical treatment of topics covered in W4911.
Examines problems encountered in multivariate analysis of
cross-sectional and time-series data.
*W4291, Advanced Topics in Quantitative Research
[Pre-requisite,
W4912]. Instruction in methods for models that have dependent variables
that are not continuous, including dichotomous and polychotomous
response models, models for censored and truncated data, sample
selection models and duration models.
W4209, Game Theory and Political TheoryApplication
of noncooperative game theory to strategic situations in politics.
Solution concepts, asymmetric information, incomplete information,
signaling, repeated games, and folk theorems. Models drawn from
elections, legislative strategy, interest group politics, regulation,
nuclear deterrence, international relations, and tariff policy.
*W4210, Research Topics in Game Theory
[Prerequisite:
W4209 and W4360, or equivalent course preparation in math and game
theory]. Advanced topics in game theory will cover the study of
repeated games, games of incomplete information and principal-agent
models with applications in the fields of voting, bargaining, lobbying
and violent conflict. Results from the study of social choice theory,
mechanism design and auction theory will also be treated. The course
will concentrate on mathematical techniques for constructing and
solving games. Students will be required to develop a topic relating to
political science and game theory and to write a formal research paper.
Recommended Courses in the Department of Statistics
STAT W4150, Introduction to Probability and Statistics (probability and statistics in one semester)
Fundamentals of probability theory and statistical inference used in engineering and applied science. Probabilistic models, random variables, useful distributions, expectations, law of large numbers, central limit theorem. Statistical inference: point and confidence interval estimation, hypothesis tests, linear regression.
STAT W4105, Probability
A calculus-based introduction to probability theory. Topics covered include random variables, conditional probability, expectation, independence, Bayes' rule, important distributions, joint distributions, moment generating functions, central limit theorem, laws of large numbers and Markov's inequality.
STAT W4107, Statistical Inference
Calculus-based introduction to the theory of statistics. Useful distributions, law of large numbers and central limit theorem, point estimation, hypothesis testing, confidence intervals, maximum likelihood, likelihood ratio tests, nonparametric procedures, theory of least squares and analysis of variance.
STAT W4330, Multilevel Models
Theory and practice, including model-checking, for random and mixed-effects models (also called hierarchical, multi-level models). Extensive use of the computer to analyze data.
STAT W4335, Sample Surveys
Introductory course on the design and analysis of sample surveys. How sample surveys are conducted, why the designs are used, how to analyze survey results, and how to derive from first principles the standard results and their generalizations. Examples from public health, social work, opinion polling, and other topics of interest.
STAT G6101, Statistical Modeling and Data Analysis I (first semester of applied statistics PhD sequence)
STAT G6102, Statistical Modeling and Data Analysis II (second semester of applied statistics PhD sequence
(Prerequisite: STAT G6101 or instructor's permission)
The Columbia Applied Statistics Center is involved with many political science projects. Its research is supported by the National Science Foundation, Institute of Education Sciences, National Security Agency, National Institutes of Health, and Department of Energy. The center runs a "Playroom" in the department that normally meets two afternoons per week and serves as a forum for presenting and discussing work in progress.
Data and Methodology Resources
Columbia University Libraries provides a gateway to its extensive data holdings through its DataGate.
American National Election Studies
Roper Center
Pew Research Center
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