Program Requirements

Summary of Requirements
2 International Studies Introductory Courses
4 Courses in one thematic subfield
2 Courses in a second thematic subfield
3 Courses in regional studies
1 B.A. Thesis Seminar Autumn (INST 29800)

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B.A. Thesis Seminar Winter (INST 29801*)
*Students completing two majors may be eligible to waive the winter seminar. This option should be discussed with the IS Program Assistant.
13 Total courses

IS Introductory Sequence. Students are required to take a two-quarter introductory sequence, taught annually, in the field of international studies. One quarter provides an overview of contemporary global issues (INST 23101); the other provides in-depth studies of selected issues (INST 23102). These courses are designed to be taken in sequence. Students are strongly encouraged to complete the sequence in their second year unless they plan to complete their regional studies requirement by participating in one of the College's study abroad programs during an Autumn or Winter Quarter. Students must complete INST 23101 and 23102 prior to the year in which they graduate.
 

Course Distribution. Students are required to complete a total of nine courses in the following combination: six courses in the two thematic subfields (two in one and four in the other); and three courses in regional studies, two of which must be in the same world region.

Students select their courses in consultation with IS program advisors. A list of approved classes that count toward the major is selected by the IS faculty each year and is updated quarterly.

IS Course Tracks.

Political Economy Thematic Track (2 or 4 courses): Nation-states and national sovereignty, relations between nation-states, political identity, development, conflict and security, and relations between states and international political (e.g., United Nations) and economic (World Bank, International Monetary Fund) organizations.

Transnational Processes Thematic Track (2 or 4 courses): Courses appropriate for this track take up issues and processes that operate across the borders of nations. These include economic, political and cultural globalization, transnational and multi-national corporations and new patterns of consumption, non-governmental organizations, human rights, environment and ecology, media and the arts.

Regional Studies Thematic Track (3 courses): Either three courses in one area of the world; or two courses in one area and one course in another area. Students majoring in IS may count one civilization course that bears a University of Chicago course number that is not used to meet the general education requirement in civilization studies; or they may count two courses taken while participating in one of the study abroad programs that feature civilization studies that is not used to meet the general education requirement in civilization studies.

Foreign Language. Students can meet the program's foreign language requirement in one of two ways:

Students must complete the equivalent of seven quarters of language study in a single language. Students who elect this option may fulfill the requirement in any of the following ways:

- Placement, via university exam, in an eighth quarter course or above

- Completion of the first six quarters by University exam or by course work. The seventh and final quarter, fulfilled by course registration.

If the student places into a seventh-quarter level course, the student must complete that course with a passing grade.

Study Abroad. Students are required to study abroad for a minimum of eight weeks in an approved study abroad program. This requirement will be waived only by petition for those able to demonstrate a similarly significant, structured international education experience. Participation in any University of Chicago approved study abroad program will fulfill this requirement. Students should consult with the study abroad advisors for more information. If students seek to undertake a program outside of the University's offerings, they must have approval of the program director prior to departure on the program.

B.A. Thesis. All students are required to complete a B.A. thesis. In consultation with IS preceptors, students prepare a topic page that is due eighth week of Spring Quarter in their third year. At this time students are also required to secure a faculty reader. In Autumn and Winter Quarter of their fourth year, students register for the B.A. Thesis Seminar (INST 29800, 29801), which is designed to teach research skills and more generally to aid the research and writing process. The final version of the B.A. thesis is due by Friday of 2nd week of the quarter in which the student plans to graduate.

Additional Information:

Honors. Students will be considered for honors on the basis of having earned an overall GPA of 3.0 or higher and 3.5 or higher in the major, and on the basis of recommendations from the faculty and preceptor readers of the B.A. thesis.

Grading. Courses taken for P/N or P/F will not be accepted toward requirements for the IS major.

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