Ph.D. Requirements
To obtain a PhD, students are required to register for four semesters of courses (years 1 and 2) and satisfactorily complete at least 12 units (upper-level seminars, lectures, or directed readings). They include
Either HGS Introduction to Advanced Genocide Studies, or HGS Theory and Methods for Genocide and Mass Atrocities Research (students must take either course);
Four electives chosen from at least four different disciplines, these understood as Clark departments or defined by the disciplinary design of the course and the disciplinary training of the instructor. (Directed Readings with non-Clark faculty do not count as one of these four electives.) The choice of these four electives must be approved by the the Director of Graduate Studies;
Two Directed Studies (HGS 399) thematically and/or methodologically related to the dissertation project.
The 12 units are to be chosen in a way that at least four of the following major areas are covered by thematically focused courses: 1) Americas and Australia, 2) Africa, 3) East and South Asia, 4) Middle (Near) East (including former Ottoman Empire), 5) East Europe (Slavic Europe, Balkans, former Russian Empire), 6) Central, Western, and Northern Europe. The Director of Graduate Studies approves the selections.
Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies Faculty
Core Faculty
Thomas Kuehne, Ph.D.
Ken MacLean, Ph.D.
Frances Tanzer, Ph.D.
Elyse Semerdjian, Ph.D.
Contributing Program (affiliated) Faculty
Anita Häusermann Fábos, Ph.D.
Everett Fox, Ph.D.
Elizabeth Imber, Ph.D.
Benjamin Korstvedt Ph.D.
Stephen Levin, Ph.D.
Valerie Sperling, Ph.D.
Ora Szekely, Ph.D.
Shelly Tenenbaum, Ph.D.
Johanna Ray Vollhardt, Ph.D.
Kristen Williams, Ph.D.
Visiting Professors
Marta Havryshko, Ph.D.
Chris Davey, Ph.D.