Department of Sociology and Anthropology
B742 Loeb
613-520-2582
http://carleton.ca/socanth
This section presents the requirements for programs in:
- M.A. Anthropology
- M.A. Anthropology with Specialization in African Studies
- M.A. Anthropology with Specialization in Digital Humanities
- Ph.D. Anthropology
- Ph.D. Anthropology with Specialization in Political Economy
Program Requirements
M.A. Anthropology (5.0 credits)
The Master of Arts program in Anthropology is a total of 5.0 credits, and each candidate is required to select, in consultation with the graduate adviser, one of the three program options.
Requirements - Thesis option (5.0 credits): | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
(Normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program) | ||
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 2.0 credits in electives | 2.0 | |
4. 2.0 credits in: | 2.0 | |
ANTH 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Research Essay option (5.0 credits): | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
(Normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program.) | ||
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 3.0 credits in electives | 3.0 | |
4. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
ANTH 5908 [1.0] | M.A. Research Essay | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Coursework option (5.0 credits): | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
(Normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program.) | ||
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 4.0 credits in electives | 4.0 | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Electives may be chosen, in consultation with the student's adviser, from the following courses:
- anthropology graduate course offerings;
- sociology graduate courses (especially in theory and methods, or in areas which relate to the student's thesis research interests);
- 4000-level courses offered in the sociology and anthropology undergraduate program;
- or a combination of the above. (Normally no more than 1.0 credit may be chosen from course offerings in other departments.)
M.A. Anthropology
with Specialization in African Studies (5.0 credits)
Requirements - Thesis option (5.0 credits): | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
AFRI 5000 [0.5] | African Studies as a Discipline: Historical and Current Perspectives | |
2. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
AFRI 5800 [0.0] | Scholarly Preparation in African Studies | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
5. 1.5 credits in electives (see Note, below) | 1.5 | |
6. 2.0 credits in: | 2.0 | |
ANTH 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Research Essay option (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
AFRI 5000 [0.5] | African Studies as a Discipline: Historical and Current Perspectives | |
2. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
AFRI 5800 [0.0] | Scholarly Preparation in African Studies | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
5. 2.5 credits in electives (see Note, below) | 2.5 | |
6. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
ANTH 5908 [1.0] | M.A. Research Essay | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Coursework option(5.0 credits) | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
AFRI 5000 [0.5] | African Studies as a Discipline: Historical and Current Perspectives | |
2. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
AFRI 5800 [0.0] | Scholarly Preparation in African Studies | |
3. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
(Normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program.) | ||
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
5. 0.5 credit from: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5109 [0.5] | Ethnography, Gender and Globalization | |
ANTH 5202 [0.5] | The Anthropology of Underdevelopment | |
ANTH 5209 [0.5] | Special Topics in the Anthropology of Africa | |
ANTH 5809 [0.5] | Selected Topics in the Anthropology of Development and Underdevelopment | |
SOCI 5404 [0.5] | Race, Ethnicity and Class in Contemporary Societies | |
- or an approved course in ANTH or SOCI approved by the Graduate Coordinator of the Institute of African Studies | ||
6. 3.0 credits in electives, including 0.5 credit in a course designated as having sufficient African Studies content | 3.0 | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Selection of Courses - African Studies
The courses listed below are relevant to students of African Studies and could, with the approval of the specific requirements of the units involved, be used as courses to help fulfil degree requirements. There are also often graduate courses and 4000-level courses in a number of units at Carleton that are offered on an ad hoc basis that have significant content appropriate to African Studies. To have any such course count towards their degree requires approval of the Director of the Institute of African Studies when it is being offered.
Note: the number of spaces in graduate courses offered by other departments may be limited, and registration may be conditional upon obtaining the prior approval of the department concerned. It is the student's responsibility to ensure that permission is obtained from the appropriate department prior to registering in any of the following courses.
African Studies
AFRI 5000 [0.5] | African Studies as a Discipline: Historical and Current Perspectives | |
AFRI 5050 [0.5] | Selected Topics in African Studies | |
AFRI 5100 [0.5] | African Studies Abroad | |
AFRI 5700 [0.5] | Directed Readings in African Studies | |
AFRI 5900 [0.5] | Placement | |
AFRI 5800 [0.0] | Scholarly Preparation in African Studies |
Anthropology
ANTH 5109 [0.5] | Ethnography, Gender and Globalization | |
ANTH 5202 [0.5] | The Anthropology of Underdevelopment | |
ANTH 5209 [0.5] | Special Topics in the Anthropology of Africa | |
ANTH 5809 [0.5] | Selected Topics in the Anthropology of Development and Underdevelopment |
English
ENGL 5008 [0.5] | Studies in African Literature | |
ENGL 5010 [0.5] | Studies in Caribbean Literature |
French
International Affairs
INAF 5603 [0.5] | Issues in Development in Africa |
Law
LAWS 5007 [0.5] | Race, Ethnicity and the Law | |
LAWS 5603 [0.5] | International Law: Theory and Practice |
Political Science
PSCI 5107 [0.5] | Globalization, Adjustment and Democracy in Africa | |
PSCI 5202 [0.5] | Development Theory and Issues | |
PSCI 5203 [0.5] | Southern Africa After Apartheid |
Sociology
SOCI 5404 [0.5] | Race, Ethnicity and Class in Contemporary Societies |
Women's and Gender Studies
WGST 5902 [0.5] | Advanced Topics in Women's and Gender Studies II |
M.A. Anthropology
with Specialization in Digital Humanities (5.0 credits)
Requirements - Thesis program (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 1.0 credit in electives | 1.0 | |
4. 2.0 credits in: | 2.0 | |
ANTH 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis | |
5. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
DIGH 5000 [0.5] | Issues in the Digital Humanities | |
6. 0.5 credit in DIGH (DIGH 5011, DIGH 5012, or annually-listed DIGH course) | 0.5 | |
7. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
DIGH 5800 [0.0] | Digital Humanities: Professional Development | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Research Essay program (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I (normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program) | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 2.0 credits in electives | 2.0 | |
4. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
ANTH 5908 [1.0] | M.A. Research Essay | |
5. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
DIGH 5000 [0.5] | Issues in the Digital Humanities | |
6. 0.5 credit in DIGH (DIGH 5011, DIGH 5012, or annually listed DIGH course) | 0.5 | |
7. 0.0 credit in DIGH 5800 | 0.0 | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Coursework program (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5401 [0.5] | Theories and Methods I (normally to be taken in the first fall term after admission to the program) | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 5402 [0.5] | Theories and Methods II | |
3. 2.5 credits in electives | 2.5 | |
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
DIGH 5000 [0.5] | Issues in the Digital Humanities | |
5. 0.5 credit in DIGH (DIGH 5011, DIGH 5012, or annually-listed DIGH course) | 0.5 | |
6. 0.5 credit in 5000-level ANTH course with a digital humanities focus | 0.5 | |
7. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
DIGH 5800 [0.0] | Digital Humanities: Professional Development | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Ph.D. Anthropology (10.0 credits)
Requirements: | ||
1. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
ANTH 6000 [1.0] | Doctoral Seminar: Theory and Method in Contemporary Anthropology | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 6002 [0.5] | Research Design | |
Two terms satisfactory participation in: | 0.0 | |
ANTH 6100 [0.0] | Thesis Writing Seminar | |
3. 1.5 credits in SOCI or ANTH courses at the 5000- or 6000-level or, with the permission of the graduate supervisor, up to 1.0 credit of graduate level courses from another unit at Carleton | 1.5 | |
4. A satisfactory research preparation portfolio | ||
5. A satisfactory thesis proposal and (when required) Research Ethics Board clearance to undertake thesis research | ||
6. Satisfactory thesis research | ||
7. 7.0 credits in: | 7.0 | |
ANTH 6909 [7.0] | Ph.D. Thesis (including successful oral defence) | |
Total Credits | 10.0 |
Residence requirements: Ph.D. candidates must normally be registered full-time in a minimum of six terms to satisfy the residence requirement. If a candidate is registered part-time the minimum residence requirement is eight terms.
Ph.D. Anthropology
with Specialization in Political Economy (10.0 credits)
Requirements: | ||
1. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
PECO 6000 [0.5] | Political Economy: Core Concepts | |
2. 0.5 credit in relevant political economy course from the approved list | 0.5 | |
3. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
ANTH 6000 [1.0] | Doctoral Seminar: Theory and Method in Contemporary Anthropology | |
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
ANTH 6002 [0.5] | Research Design | |
ANTH 6100 [0.0] | Thesis Writing Seminar | |
5. 0.0 credit in (two terms satisfactory participation in): | 0.0 | |
ANTH 6100 [0.0] | Thesis Writing Seminar | |
3. 0.5 credits in SOCI or ANTH courses at the 5000 or 6000 level. | 0.5 | |
4. A satisfactory research preparation portfolio | ||
5. A satisfactory thesis proposal and (when required) Research Ethics Board clearance to undertake thesis research | ||
6. Satisfactory thesis research | ||
7. 7.0 credits in: | 7.0 | |
ANTH 6909 [7.0] | Ph.D. Thesis (including successful oral defence) | |
Total Credits | 10.0 |
Selection of Courses - Political Economy
In addition to the graduate courses offered by, or associated with, the Institute of Political Economy, the courses listed below are relevant to students of political economy and would, with the prior approval of the Institute, be used to design a coherent and internally complementary set of courses to fulfill degree requirements. The list is not exclusive and is subject to change.
Master's students may select 1.0 credit in political economy at the 4000-level.
Note: the number of spaces in graduate courses offered by other departments may be limited, and registration may be conditional upon obtaining the prior approval of the department concerned. It is the student's responsibility to ensure that permission is obtained from the appropriate department prior to registering in any of the following courses.
Anthropology
ANTH 5106 [0.5] | North American Indigenous Peoples | |
ANTH 5107 [0.5] | Issues in North American Ethnohistory | |
ANTH 5109 [0.5] | Ethnography, Gender and Globalization | |
ANTH 5202 [0.5] | The Anthropology of Underdevelopment | |
ANTH 5208 [0.5] | Anthropology of Indigeneity | |
ANTH 5210 [0.5] | Special Topics in Indigenous Studies | |
ANTH 5560 [0.5] | Economic Anthropology | |
ANTH 5704 [0.5] | Anthropology of the Body, Health, Illness and Healing | |
ANTH 5808 [0.5] | Selected Topics in North American Native Studies | |
ANTH 5809 [0.5] | Selected Topics in the Anthropology of Development and Underdevelopment |
Canadian Studies
CDNS 5101 [0.5] | Indigenous Peoples, Canada and the North | |
CDNS 5102 [0.5] | Indigenous Politics and Resurgence in Canada | |
CDNS 5201 [0.5] | Critical Perspectives on Canadian Feminism | |
CDNS 5202 [0.5] | Gendering Canada: Selected Contemporary Debates | |
CDNS 5501 [0.5] | Decolonizing Canada: Cultural Politics and Collective Identities | |
CDNS 5601 [0.5] | Constructing Canada: The Politics of National Identity |
Communication and Media Studies
COMS 5200 [0.5] | Civic Media | |
COMS 5206 [0.5] | Communication, Culture, Regulation | |
COMS 5214 [0.5] | The Local and the Global | |
COMS 5219 [0.5] | Regional Studies of Media | |
COMS 5224 [0.5] | Internet, Infrastructure, Materialities | |
COMS 5225 [0.5] | Critical Data Studies |
Geography
GEOG 5005 [0.5] | Global Environmental Change: Human Implications | |
GEOG 5400 [0.5] | Territory and Territoriality | |
GEOG 5500 [0.5] | Special Topics in the Study of Cities and Urbanization | |
GEOG 5502 [0.5] | Special Topics in Geography of Globalization | |
GEOG 5600 [0.5] | Empire and Colonialism |
History
HIST 5210 [0.5] | Power | |
HIST 5211 [0.5] | Consumption | |
HIST 5314 [0.5] | Colonialism and Postcolonialism in Canada | |
HIST 5315 [0.5] | State and Society in Canadian History | |
HIST 5803 [0.5] | History of Women, Gender and Sexuality: Foundations |
Law
LAWS 5002 [0.5] | Law and Gender Relations | |
LAWS 5003 [0.5] | Law, Economy and Society | |
LAWS 5004 [0.5] | Law, Crime and Social Order | |
LAWS 5005 [0.5] | Law, State and Politics | |
LAWS 5006 [0.5] | Historical Perspectives on Law and Society | |
LAWS 5007 [0.5] | Race, Ethnicity and the Law | |
LAWS 5200 [0.5] | International Economic Law: Regulation of Trade and Investment | |
LAWS 5302 [0.5] | Feminism, Law and Social Transformation | |
LAWS 5306 [0.5] | Police and Capital |
Political Economy
PECO 5501 [0.5] | Selected Problems in Political Economy I | |
PECO 5502 [0.5] | Selected Problems in Political Economy II |
Political Science
PSCI 5003 [0.5] | Political Parties in Canada | |
PSCI 5008 [0.5] | The Politics of Climate Change | |
PSCI 5009 [0.5] | Canadian Political Economy | |
PSCI 5100 [0.5] | Indigenous Politics of North America | |
PSCI 5105 [0.5] | Post-Communist Politics in East Central Europe | |
PSCI 5107 [0.5] | Globalization, Adjustment and Democracy in Africa | |
PSCI 5202 [0.5] | Development Theory and Issues | |
PSCI 5207 [0.5] | International Political Sociology | |
PSCI 5208 [0.5] | Global Social Policy | |
PSCI 5209 [0.5] | Forced Migration and Global Politics | |
PSCI 5303 [0.5] | Governmentality and Politics | |
PSCI 5410 [0.5] | Postcolonial Theories and Practices | |
PSCI 5509 [0.5] | Governing in the Global Economy | |
PSCI 5607 [0.5] | Politics of North America | |
PSCI 5802 [0.5] | Political Economy of Global Money and Finance | |
PSCI 5808 [0.5] | International Political Economy | |
PSCI 5810 [0.5] | Approaches to Environmental Politics |
Public Administration
PADM 5213 [0.5] | Gender and Public Policy | |
PADM 5220 [0.5] | Regulation and Public Policy | |
PADM 5224 [0.5] | Aboriginal Policy | |
PADM 5228 [0.5] | Social Policy | |
PADM 5811 [0.5] | The International Policy Framework | |
PADM 5813 [0.5] | The Evolution of World Bank/IMF Policy Conditionality | |
PADM 5814 [0.5] | Program and Project Management |
Sociology
SOCI 5000 [0.5] | Classical Sociological Theory | |
SOCI 5002 [0.5] | Contemporary Sociological Theory | |
SOCI 5007 [0.5] | Social Change and Economic Development | |
SOCI 5204 [0.5] | Consuming Passions: The Regulation of Consumption, Appearance and Sexuality | |
SOCI 5205 [1.0] | Canadian Society | |
SOCI 5209 [0.5] | Sociology of Science and Technology | |
SOCI 5305 [0.5] | Police and Capital | |
SOCI 5308 [0.5] | Feminist Analyses | |
SOCI 5400 [0.5] | Political Sociology | |
SOCI 5404 [0.5] | Race, Ethnicity and Class in Contemporary Societies | |
SOCI 5405 [0.5] | Power and Stratification | |
SOCI 5407 [0.5] | Governmentality and Politics | |
SOCI 5408 [0.5] | Feminism and Materialism | |
SOCI 5409 [0.5] | The Politics of Social Movements and the State | |
SOCI 5504 [0.5] | Selected Problems in Political Economy I | |
SOCI 5607 [0.5] | Contemporary Theories of Crime and Social Regulation | |
SOCI 5804 [0.5] | Modern Marxist Theory | |
SOCI 5806 [0.5] | Selected Topics in Sociology |
Anthropology (ANTH) Courses
Ecological Anthropology
Theoretical and ethnographic approaches to the production of nature across disciplinary categories and natural-cultural configurations. Specific topics considered may include ecological crisis, indigenous rights and posthuman ethnography.
Visual Anthropology as a Research Method: Dilemmas and Debates
Anthropological theories, debates, and dilemmas related to visual anthropology as part of ethnographic practice in historical and contemporary contexts. Topics may include ethics, analysis of images, film, symbols; the use of visual materials in ethnographic writing.
North American Indigenous Peoples
Selected issues in North American Indian, Inuit, and Métis ethnographic studies. Debates over social change, cultural autonomy, native rights, and government policy.
Issues in North American Ethnohistory
Methodological and substantive problems in the history of North American indigenous peoples. Controversies concerning the impact of European penetration and colonial policies on inter-tribal relations, cultural identity, and other aspects of native life.
Ethnography, Gender and Globalization
Intersections of gender and globalization; ethnographic focus on how the movements of people, goods, ideas, and capital are transforming existing formations of gender and sexualities. Topics and approaches may vary from year to year.
The Anthropology of Underdevelopment
Analysis of theoretical and historically concrete issues in the study of variable economic systems ranging from domestic subsistence and peasant production to slavery and capital-dominated markets.
Anthropology of Indigeneity
An international exploration of what it means to claim indigenousness within a variety of contexts. The cultural politics of indigenous status in relation to such issues as primitivism, memory and revivalism in modern nation-states and diasporic communities.
Special Topics in the Anthropology of Africa
Topic varies from year to year, and will be announced in advance of the registration period.
Special Topics in Indigenous Studies
Topic varies from year to year, and will be announced in advance of the registration period.
Special Topics in Ethnography
Topic varies from year to year, and will be announced in advance of the registration period.
Anthropology of Natural Resources
Anthropology of natural resources. Topics may include the economies, ecologies, cultural and social dynamics of fishing, forestry, lands, mining, oil, wildlife, at varying analytical scales, including a critical examination of the term “natural resource” itself.
Seminar and discussion three hours per week.
Theories and Methods I
Theoretical and methodological debates in contemporary anthropology.
Theories and Methods II
Theoretical and methodological debates in contemporary anthropology.
Interpreting Symbols
Theoretical and methodological approaches to the anthropology of signs and symbols, including the internal workings of symbolic systems, and their relationship to other aspects of social life.
Phenomenology for Anthropologists and Sociologists
This seminar builds theoretical and methodological bridges between phenomenology and anthropology/sociology. Students read key texts from, among others, Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Plessner, Schultz, and Waldenfels and learn to apply concepts in research. Topics include body and senses, intersubjectivity and life-world, selfhood and otherness.
Anthropology of Performance
The seminar introduces students to the anthropological concept of performance and its foundations in speech act theory, practice theory, semiotics and phenomenology. Topics range from the cross-cultural study of diverse performance genres to reflections on the performative nature of social life and cultural reality.
Economic Anthropology
Anthropology’s holistic, comparative and critical contribution to the study of livelihood. How practices and understandings of production, circulation, consumption, and property vary cross-culturally. Relevant theoretical debates including those among formalist (neo-classical), substantivist, Marxist, and interpretive approaches over the applicability of capitalist thinking.
Seminar three hours a week.
Anthropology of Religion
Anthropological literature and theories on religion in light of current debates in anthropology.
Anthropology of the Body, Health, Illness and Healing
Issues and applications in medical anthropology. Topics may include the sociocultural meanings inscribed on the body; cultural perceptions of the prevention, causes and treatment of illness; social dimensions of the illness experience; and the political economy of health.
Contemporary Material Cultures
The study of material culture and its potential for addressing contemporary social and cultural conditions in a variety of local and transcultural contexts.
Special Topics in Anthropology
Topic varies from year to year, and will be announced in advance of the registration period.
Special Topics in Symbolism and Culture
Topic varies from year to year, and will be announced in advance of the registration period.
Selected Topics in North American Native Studies
Topic varies from year to year. Students should check with the Department regarding the topic offered.
Selected Topics in the Anthropology of Development and Underdevelopment
Topic varies from year to year. Students should check with the Department regarding the topic offered.
Research Design
Design and methods of anthropological enquiry.
Tutorial
Fieldwork
Directed field research.
Prerequisite(s): permission of the Department.
Placement in Anthropology
This course offers an opportunity to earn academic credit by engaging in research activities under the supervision of professional researchers in museums, government departments, non-governmental organizations, or other professional research settings. Placement research must be related to the preparation of the master's thesis.
Prerequisite(s): permission of the Department.
M.A. Research Essay
Students will normally enrol in this course for a maximum of three consecutive terms of study, including one summer term. Students must normally enrol in this course not later than the beginning of the second full year of study.
M.A. Thesis
Doctoral Seminar: Theory and Method in Contemporary Anthropology
An in-depth exploration of theory and method in contemporary socio-cultural anthropology with special emphasis on engaged anthropology. This course is required of all first year doctoral students in anthropology.
Selected Topics in Anthropology
Topic varies from year to year. Students should check with the Department regarding the topic offered.
Research Design
Issues in the design and methods of anthropological inquiry, including proposal-writing, research ethics, and research funding. Required of all first-year Ph.D Anthropology students.
Thesis Writing Seminar
This seminar will meet on a regular basis for students who are writing their doctoral theses to present draft chapters for constructive critical discussion. Normally required for all Ph.D. Anthropology students who have completed their doctoral research, until the completion of their theses.
Tutorial
A tutorial is designed to permit students to pursue individual research on a relevant topic. Topics will be chosen in consultation with at least one faculty member, the student's supervisor, and the Anthropology graduate coordinator.
Placement in Anthropology
This course offers an opportunity to earn academic credit by engaging in research activities under the supervision of professional researchers in museums, government departments, nongovernmental organizations, or other professional research settings. Placement research must be related to the preparation of the doctoral research.
Ph.D. Thesis
Summer session: some of the courses listed in this Calendar are offered during the summer. Hours and scheduling for summer session courses will differ significantly from those reported in the fall/winter Calendar. To determine the scheduling and hours for summer session classes, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Not all courses listed are offered in a given year. For an up-to-date statement of course offerings for the current session and to determine the term of offering, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Regulations
See the General Regulations section of this Calendar.
Minimum Grade Requirement
A grade of B- or better is required in each credit counted toward the master's degree. With the recommendation of the department, and permission of the Dean of the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Affairs, a candidate may be allowed a grade of C+ in 1.0 credit or each of two 0.5-credits.
Transfer from One M.A. Option to Another M.A. Option
Students who choose to change from one program option to another (i.e., from/to the thesis, research essay, or course work option), are required to do so before registering for a third term after initial, full-time registration, or before registering for a fifth term after initial part-time registration.
Regulations
See the General Regulations section of this Calendar.
Candidates must obtain a grade of B- or higher in each course and Satisfactory on the Ph.D. thesis and its oral defence.
Admission
M.A. Anthropology
The requirement for admission into the master's program is a B.A. Honours (or the equivalent) with at least high honours standing in anthropology or a closely-related field. Where relevant, previous professional experience will be taken into account in determining an applicant's standing on admission.
Qualifying-Year Program
Applicants with general (three-year) bachelor's degrees may be admitted into a qualifying-year program designed to raise their standing to honours status. Students earning at least high honours standing in their qualifying-year courses will be considered for admission into the master's program. Refer to the General Regulations section of this Calendar for details of the regulations governing the qualifying year.
Accelerated Pathway
The accelerated pathway in Anthropology is a flexible and individualized plan of graduate study for students in their final year of a Carleton B.A. Honours degree in Anthropology.
Students in their third or early‐fourth year of study in the B.A. Honours degree in Anthropology should consult with the Graduate Co-ordinator to determine if the accelerated pathway is appropriate for them.
Accelerated Pathway Requirements
- ANTH courses at the 5000‐level or higher with a grade of A- or higher, excluding ANTH 5900.
- Minimum GPA in Anthropology of A-
Students may receive advanced standing with transfer of credit of up to 1.0 credit which can reduce their time to completion for the M.A. degree. The final decision on whether or not advanced standing will be granted will be made at the time of admission. Students should indicate the desire to be considered for advanced standing in their application for admission to the M.A.
Admission
Ph.D. Anthropology
The Ph.D. Anthropology normally will be undertaken on a full-time basis, however the department will consider admission on a part-time basis. Full-time students are expected to complete the program in four years, and part-time students are expected to complete the program in eight years.
The normal requirement for admission to the Ph.D. program is a master's degree (or equivalent) in anthropology, normally with a minimum average of A-, and with no grade below B.
A student already enrolled in the Carleton M.A. program in Anthropology who shows outstanding academic performance and research promise may be permitted to transfer to the Ph.D. program upon completion of the M.A. course work and upon the recommendation of the Anthropology graduate committee.
Applicants whose academic preparation has deficiencies in certain areas may be admitted to the Ph.D. program, but will normally be required to complete additional course work.
Applicants whose first language is not English must demonstrate a fluent knowledge of English. Please see sections 3.6 in the General Regulations section of this calendar.