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5 dni temu · The Columbia University and Slavery project is a research and justice initiative examining Columbia’s connections to the history and legacies of enslavement. The ongoing work aims to provide a fuller and more nuanced picture of Columbia’s past, while also helping to inform conversations about the university’s role in the present.
- ABOUT
Our faculty of approximately 50 faculty members -together...
- UNDERGRADUATE
Welcome to the Department of History at Columbia University!...
- GRADUATE
Columbia has been one of the most important centers of...
- Doctoral Program
Columbia has been one of the most important centers of...
- COURSE INFO
Graduate programs – Azalia Resendiz, PhD Program Coordinator...
- History
The History department allows up to 3 courses outside of...
- ABOUT
Learn about the leading center of historical scholarship in the world, with faculty, students, and curriculum spanning all aspects of human history. Explore the undergraduate and graduate programs, the core courses, and the senior theses in history.
Learn about the history curriculum, requirements, and advising for Columbia and Barnard undergraduates. Explore the faculty, courses, and career resources of one of the leading centers of historical scholarship in the world.
Columbia has been one of the most important centers of graduate education in history since modern Ph.D. programs began in America over a century ago. Our Department has a strongly international character, and our faculty and students are diverse in interests, origins, and intellectual orientations. The History Department currently offers two ...
Columbia has been one of the most important centers of graduate education in history since modern Ph.D. programs began in America over a century ago. Recipients of our degrees hold distinguished positions in virtually every major university in the United States, and in many abroad.
18 paź 2024 · Graduate programs – Azalia Resendiz, PhD Program Coordinator at phd-history@columbia.edu. NOTE ON COURSE CLASSIFICATIONS: The course classifications (i.e. Modern European, U.S., Jewish, Medieval, etc.) are neither formal nor final. A course can count for more than one specialization.
The History department allows up to 3 courses outside of Columbia University to count towards the major (up to 2 for concentrators and minors), to which no more than 2 may be applied toward the specialization.