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Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Newark: Division of Global Affairs
Outline
The Division of Global Affairs (DGA) was established in 2005 as the
successor to the Center for Global Change and Governance, in existence
since 1995. In 2007, the Ph.D program at the Division of Global Affairs
was ranked fifth in the nation in the Benchmarking Academic Excellence
survey of Top Universities in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Disciplines for 2006-07. The Division of Global Affairs Ph. D. program
in Global Affairs' fifth place ranking was in the combined category of
International Affairs and Development.
Housed within the Graduate School of Rutgers University-Newark, the
DGA administers graduate programs in global affairs, conducts research
on global change and governance, and serves as the focus of the
University's outreach to professional communities with global concerns.
At the core of the DGA's concerns is the relationship between
globalization, the post-cold war realignment of great-power relations,
and the growing role in the promotion and attenuation of conflict of
international institutions and non-governmental organizations;
international trade, global finance, and transnational corporations;
and social movements. The DGA's approach to global affairs is
explicitly professional and multidisciplinary, drawing on the research,
teaching, and expertise of a distinguished faculty representing a
variety of disciplines—anthropology, business, criminal justice,
economics, history, law, philosophy, political science, public affairs
and administration, and sociology. The DGA's academic agenda is
specifically geared to the needs of a world increasingly facing global
and local challenges.
The Division of Global Affairs has become a vital participant in the educational and professional life of the New York metropolitan area, northern New Jersey , and the city of Newark . The DGA's outreach to the region's many constituencies and communities—as well as its involvement in the ongoing revival of its home city—builds on its commitment to education and service.
DGA professors are actively engaged in teaching as well as in research and writing on global affairs. Their research encompasses such issues as biotechnology, business ethics, corporate innovation, economic policy, environmental institutions, genocide, global cities, global diplomacy, global finance, globalization and regionalization, information technology, international migration, international trade, media and propaganda, nationalism, political violence, sustainable development, transnational crime, and war. Reflective of the DGA's global concerns, DGA graduate students hail from a variety of cultural, educational, and professional backgrounds. Both faculty and students contribute to making Rutgers-Newark the most diverse major research university in the United States.
Curriculum
Students
The DGA's graduate programs—leading to the Master of Science in Global
Affairs and the Doctor of Philosophy in Global Affairs—enable students
to pursue careers in:
• international institutions such as the United Nations and its affiliated organizations
• transnational corporations and international financial institutions
• non-governmental organizations
• government agencies
• think tanks and research institutions
• university departments and administration
• journalism and media
Institution
- Tokyo 2008
Contact details
Desiree Gordon , Administrative Assistant, DGA
Program email address: desireeg@andromeda.rutgers.edu
