PhD Graduate Diploma
Diploma Requirements
Requirements for the GSJ Graduate Diploma are in addition to those of the student’s home PhD program.
Courses
Six units (i.e. two one-semester courses), one required and one elective. Courses cannot be counted towards both the Ph.D. degree and the GSJ Graduate Diploma. Students will normally complete the diploma coursework during the second year of their PhD studies. In order to ensure timely degree completion, diploma students are encouraged to choose an elective course likely to directly enhance and move forward their thesis research.
Required Course
Gender Studies 700 Theorizing Gender and Social Justice
Elective Course
One additional elective course in gender and social justice, from the list of approved electives.
If you find a course not on the pre-approved list that you think is relevant to your studies, and whose content deals with gender and social justice, contact the Director to ask if the course can count as an elective.
Thesis
Students in the GSJ diploma program must write a doctoral thesis on a topic related to the broad fields of Gender and Social Justice.
You will first write your thesis proposal in accordance with the requirements and timeline of your home department. Once it is approved by your home department, submit your proposal to GSJ for formative feedback. There are two opportunities a year for proposal feedback:
- Submit by Nov 1 for feedback in late November.
- Submit by April 1 for feedback in late April.
The GSJ director, with support from the PhD Diploma Committee, will approve the dissertation topic’s relevance to the program’s interdisciplinary focus in gender and social justice and provide comments designed to strengthen the research as a contribution to this broad field. After this point, thesis evaluation for Ph.D. students is entirely at the discretion of the home department, i.e. the supervisor and thesis committee members appointed by that department. Faculty members in the Gender and Social Justice program may sit on doctoral thesis supervisory committees, or serve as external examiners of doctoral theses, but such arrangements are entirely at the discretion of the home department.
GSJ Symposium
Please see the next section.