Regional Studies
Regional Studies
Regional Studies
Administrative Information
The regional studies major is designed to give undergraduates the general mastery of a discipline and at the same time permit them to do specialized work in the history and cultures of a particular geographic area through the associated institutes of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. It is an interdisciplinary major in which students divide their work between the associated institute and an appropriate College department. Students plan their programs with the consultant of the associated institute. General requirements for a regional studies major are listed below.
The regional studies major is designed to give undergraduates the general mastery of a discipline and at the same time permit them to do specialized work in the history and cultures of a particular geographic area through the associated institutes of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. It is an interdisciplinary major in which students divide their work between the associated institute and an appropriate academic department. Students plan their programs with the consultant of the associated institute they have selected. General requirements for a regional studies major are listed below; specific requirements are discussed in the description of each institute’s program.
Undergraduate Requirements
For a Major in Regional Studies
A minimum of 36 points, of which 18 must be credited by the associated institute listed below, and an additional 18 must be in one of the College departments designated as relevant by the institute. Six points of seminar work approved by the institute are required of all majors and are included in the total of 36 points.
Language study
See requirements of individual institutes. Courses taken to satisfy the institute’s language requirement are not counted toward the 18 institute points.
EAST CENTRAL EUROPEAN CENTER
Director: Prof. Alan Timberlake, 708 Hamilton; 854-3941
Related departments: Anthropology, Economics, History, Political
Science, Slavic Languages, and Sociology.
Language requirement: Two years or demonstrated reading knowledge
of one of the following languages: Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian, or Ukrainian.
A current list of courses available to students interested in East Central European studies can be obtained from the center, 1227 International Affairs Building.
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