Political Science

Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago

Recent Job Placements

See the chart below for a list of recent professional placements for our departmental PhDs, arranged by year of graduation. Here is the key to the types of academic placements listed:

  • TT = Tenure-Track Assistant Professor
  • I = Instructor
  • L = Lecturer
  • P = Postdoctoral Fellow or Researcher
  • V = Visiting Assistant Professor
  • O = Non-Academic Placement

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Program Requirements

The PhD program in political economy is structured to provide accelerated and intensive training in formal theory and empirical methods for causal inference alongside substantive training in political science. Students who satisfy the following program requirements graduate with a PhD in political economy.

Core coursework

Students are required to take (normally in the first year):

  • Formal Political Theory I, II, and III. This sequence provides training akin to graduate microeconomics, but with a focus on topics and methods of particular importance to scholars of political economy.
  • Applied Econometrics I, II, and III. This sequence, which is shared with the Harris School Ph.D. program in public policy, provides training in statistical methods and tools of causal inference.

They are also required to take (normally in the second year):

  • Political Economy I (Formal Models of Politics), Political Economy II (Theory and Empirics in Political Economy), and Political Economy III (Advanced Topics in Political Economy). This sequence builds upon tools learned in the first year of the program.

Elective coursework

Students must also take at least eight elective PhD-level courses. In consultation with their advisor, students may choose courses from Political Science, the Harris School, or elsewhere in the University.

As part of their elective coursework, students must complete a field-seminar sequence in Political Science (one or two courses, depending on the field) in American politics, comparative politics, international relations, or political theory. If no field seminar is offered for the student’s chosen field, the student may take one or more alternative courses, to be approved by the program director in consultation with the student’s advisor and relevant faculty in Political Science.

Research Paper

By the end of their second year in the program, students must complete a research paper that uses formal theory and/or empirical methods of causal inference in a sophisticated way to answer an important question about politics. This paper may be coauthored with other graduate students but not with faculty. The paper is read by two affiliated faculty, who evaluate the manuscript as if it were a journal submission. Following receipt of faculty comments, students revise and resubmit their paper, for review by the same affiliated faculty.

Comprehensive Exams

Students must pass comprehensive exams in three areas: formal theory, econometrics, and a substantive subfield of political science (American politics, comparative politics, international relations, or political theory).

The comprehensive exams in formal theory and econometrics are written exams, to be administered the summer after the first year. Students who received an average grade of B+ or better in the first-year sequence in formal political theory are exempt from the comprehensive exam in formal theory; students who received an average grade of B+ or better in the first-year sequence in applied econometrics are exempt from the comprehensive exam in econometrics.

The substantive subfield exam is a two-hour oral exam, to be administered by two faculty, at least one of whom must be an affiliate of the program. This exam must be taken no later than the end of the second year.

Substituting prior coursework for program requirements

In limited circumstances, and with the approval of the program director, students with prior graduate training may replace one or more required courses with an equal number of elective courses. Students who have completed the equivalent of either of the first-year core sequences at some other university can petition to take the comprehensive exam in that area upon entry into the program. Performance on the exam equivalent to a grade of A- or better allows for elective coursework to be taken in place of the core sequence.

Requirements for progression beyond the second year

To progress beyond the second year, students must

  • Receive a passing grade in all core courses and eight electives, as specified above; two of the elective courses, but not the field-seminar sequence in Political Science, can be taken pass/fail
  • Receive a B+ or better in each of the core second-year courses in political economy
  • Receive approval of the research paper
  • Receive a passing grade or grade-based exemption on all three comprehensive exams

Coursework beyond the second year is optional but encouraged if important for a student’s research.

Mentored Teaching Experience

Students in the program serve as a teaching assistant, core intern, core lecturer, or lead instructor in at least three courses. Teaching outside of Political Science or the Harris School must be approved by the program director. Under typical circumstances, students do not teach until their third year in the program.

Dissertation

Under the supervision of a dissertation committee, students prepare a dissertation proposal during their third year. The committee must comprise at least three University faculty. At least two committee members, including the chair, must be affiliates of the program. The proposal must be defended no later than the end of the Autumn quarter of the fourth year in the program.

Defense of the completed dissertation takes place before the dissertation committee. Under typical circumstances, this occurs by the end of the fifth year in the program. Students may request an additional year to complete a dissertation project, should the nature of the student’s research require it (e.g., because the project requires extensive fieldwork). Any such request must be approved by the program director, in consultation with the student’s advisor. No extensions are provided beyond the sixth year.

Measuring Progress

Continued enrollment in the program requires students to make satisfactory academic progress. The program reviews student progress annually, and will communicate deficiencies to the student, along with a timeline for completing the deficiencies, and the consequences resulting from failure to do so.

Students with questions about program requirements and milestones should contact Marcy Krause ( [email protected] ) Program Administrator. Students may also contact Brett Baker ( [email protected] ), Associate Dean of Students in the Social Sciences, and Amanda Young ( [email protected] ), Director, Graduate Student Affairs in UChicagoGRAD. 

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Our graduates find roles and phd positions at top institutions., phd program placement.

Graduates of the MACRM program are admitted into numerous PhD programs, both at Harris and outside of Harris, such as:

  • University of Maryland
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • University of Rochester

Programs include economics, political science, and various public policy programs.

Career Outcomes

Graduates who did not immediately pursue PhD programs after the MACRM degree entered research assistant/fellow roles at institutions like:

  • The University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy
  • The University of Chicago Booth School of Business
  • Energy and Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC)
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Political Science Doctoral Student Burak Tan receives 2024 Davis Projects for Peace Grant

University of Chicago’s International House

International House of Chicago Graduate Fellows Burak Tan, PhD’26 has been awarded Davis Projects for Peace Grants for the summer of 2024. This year’s awardees also Lina Gonzalez, MPP’24, Pedro Huet, MPP’24, and Jane Kim, MPP’24.

Davis Projects for Peace is the vision of International House New York alumna Kathryn Wasserman Davis who, on her 100th birthday in 2007, launched this program at over 90 college campuses in the United States to inspire young people to create initiatives which would bring new energy and ideas to the prospects of peace in the world. In 2008, Mrs. Davis extended the funding of this program to the group of International Houses Worldwide in addition to the schools associated with the Davis United World College (UWC) Scholars Program.  Learn more about Kathryn Davis and the Davis Projects for Peace grant program .

Burak Tan, PhD’26 will use his grant for the project  Community Networks Against Gender Discrimination in Southeast Turkey  to address the situation of the LGBTQ+ community in southeastern Turkey which has been impacted by the Kurdish ethnic conflict. This project will be completed in Diyarbakir, Turkey.

These projects are among the twenty projects from members of the International Houses Worldwide community funded at $10,000 each for implementation during the summer of 2024.  Follow the progress of all the Davis Projects for Peace through online journals .

Learn more on the International House website .

Image credit: University of Chicago’s International House.  University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf7-02334, Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.

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Zikai Li is a PhD student in political science at the University of Chicago, where he's jointly enrolled in the MS Program in Statistics. He studies international and comparative political economy and applied research methodology. His current projects examine information exposure and belief manipulation in survey experiments, the (mis)measurement of strategic voting in different electoral systems, and the use of placebo tests for assessing event study designs in political science. He holds an MA from the University of Chicago and a BA from Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China. 

You can read more about Zikai at his website,  zikai.li .

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COMMENTS

  1. Placement

    Placement. The department's graduate training prepares its students to compete for the country's top academic positions and postdoctoral fellowships, as well as careers in the private sector, non-profit organizations, and government. The department offers numerous resources for preparing graduate students for the job market, including faculty ...

  2. Department of Political Science Homepage

    From the very beginning, the Department of Political Science at the University of Chicago has been a pioneer in the development of social scientific understandings of government and politics. Learn more. Graduate studies in the department.

  3. Graduate Study

    Graduate Study. Photo of UChicago Political Science students engaged in a course. The University of Chicago leads the world in the study of political science. Its faculty and students are engaged in critical inquiry on a wide range of topics, from American elections to the origins of the modern state. Chicago values this breadth of scholarship.

  4. PhDs on the Job Market

    The doctoral program at Harris Public Policy prepares students interested in research-oriented careers in such areas as crime, education, conflict, health, microeconomics, and political economy. 2023-24 Job Market Candidates

  5. Political Science

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  6. Recent Job Placements

    Graduate Job Placement; Recent Job Placements Recent Job Placements ... O = Non-Academic Placement; 2022-23 Name Dissertation Title / Committee ... (chair), Pippin, and Harcourt (UChicago Political Science) Helsinki University (L); New York University (P, 2-year, 1 extra year at NYU Abu Dhabi) 2014-15

  7. PhD stipends and program placement success in political science

    We collect and validate data on assistantship stipends in political science from PhDStipends.com, and on tenure-track placements from an analysis of departmental placement pages. Graduate pay is significantly associated with tenure-track placements in the job market cycles spanning 2019-2021, independently of program size, rank, student ...

  8. Program Requirements

    Requirements for progression beyond the second year. To progress beyond the second year, students must. Receive a passing grade in all core courses and eight electives, as specified above; two of the elective courses, but not the field-seminar sequence in Political Science, can be taken pass/fail. Receive a B+ or better in each of the core ...

  9. PDF Ph.D. Program in Political Economy

    Staffed by an outstanding group of faculty (https://politicaleconomy.uchicago.edu/faculty/) in the Department of Political Science and the Harris School of Public Policy, this program provides accelerated training in formal theory and statistical methods alongside deep engagement with political science. Political Economy Courses PECO 40102.

  10. PhD Placement

    PhD Outcomes for MAPSS Graduates. MAPSS places more graduates in funded PhD programs than any MA program in the world. Over the last decade, we have sent an average of 78 students for the PhD each year. Almost 90% of our students have been successful in their applications.

  11. PhD in Political Economy

    The field of political economy applies tools such as game theory and empirical methods for causal inference to the study of political institutions and behavior. The University of Chicago's new PhD program in political economy offers an extraordinary opportunity to develop these skills in preparation for a career in academia.

  12. Outcomes

    Programs include economics, political science, and various public policy programs. Career Outcomes. Graduates who did not immediately pursue PhD programs after the MACRM degree entered research assistant/fellow roles at institutions like: The University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy; The University of Chicago Booth School of Business

  13. Graduate Study

    Graduate Study. Photo of UChicago Political Science students engaged in a course. The University of Chicago leads the world in the study of political science. Its faculty and students are engaged in critical inquiry on a wide range of topics, from American elections to the origins of the modern state. Chicago values this breadth of scholarship.

  14. PhD stipends and program placement success in political science

    A key grievance of the student labor movement is that across much of academia, and especially in the social sciences and humanities, stipends tied to PhD assistantships fall short of a living wage. In this article, we consider the issue from a pedagogical perspective, expecting that higher pay may lead to stronger program outcomes. We collect and validate data on assistantship stipends in ...

  15. Political Science Doctoral Student Burak Tan receives 2024 Davis

    International House of Chicago Graduate Fellows Burak Tan, PhD'26 has been awarded Davis Projects for Peace Grants for the summer of 2024. This year's awardees also Lina Gonzalez, MPP'24, Pedro Huet, MPP'24, and Jane Kim, MPP'24.

  16. Zikai Li

    He studies international and comparative political economy and applied research methodology. His current projects examine information exposure and belief manipulation in survey experiments, the (mis)measurement of strategic voting in different electoral systems, and the use of placebo tests for assessing event study designs in political science.