Course Name |
Global Womens Studies - Structured |
Course Provider |
NUI Galway |
Course Code |
1SPA1 1SPA2 |
Course Type |
Postgraduate |
Qualifications |
Award Name | NFQ Classification | Awarding Body | NFQ Level |
Degree - Doctoral (Level 10 NFQ)
More info...
|
Major |
National University of Ireland |
Level 10 NFQ |
|
Apply To |
Course provider |
Attendance Options |
Full time, Part time, Daytime |
Location (Districts) |
Galway City |
Qualification Letters |
PhD |
Application Date |
1SPA1 full-time 1SPA2 part-time Important: Apply by mid-July for September entry
Structured PhD (Global Women's Studies)—full-time
Structured PhD (Global Women's Studies)—part-time
Applications are made online via the NUI Galway Postgraduate Applications System. |
Application Weblink |
Web Page - Click Here |
Course Fee |
Expand+Postgraduate Tuition Fees
Fees can be subject to change from year to year. Please check www.nuigalway.ie/fees for exact individual course fees. Fees quoted are all per annum fees.
Tuition fees for international (non-EU*) students are also li...
Hide-Postgraduate Tuition Fees
Fees can be subject to change from year to year. Please check www.nuigalway.ie/fees for exact individual course fees. Fees quoted are all per annum fees.
Tuition fees for international (non-EU*) students are also listed on www.nuigalway.ie/fees
*An EU student is defined as an EU national (i.e., holding an EU passport/or birth certificate) who has been ordinarily resident in an EU member state for at least three of the five years immediately preceding their entry to the third-level course. This excludes residency for educational purposes. For more information see www.nuigalway.ie/fees
|
Link to Course Fee |
Web Page - Click Here |
Financial Support |
Grants
Comprehensive information is available online at www.studentfinance.ie. Grant applications can also be made online at www.susi.ie
Tax Relief
Full- and part-time students may be entitled to tax relief on tuition fees. Applications for tax relief on course fees paid must be made using an application form available from the Revenue Commissioners. See www.revenue.ie. The maximum amount of tax relief on tuition fees is €7,000 per annum. |
Entry Requirements |
Candidates should have obtained an honours degree (Second Class Honours, Grade 1 [or equivalent international qualification ] minimum). |
Comment |
Changes to programmes: Please note that there may be changes to course curriculum and delivery due to COVID-19. At all times, delivering on course learning outcomes whilst protecting the health and wellbeing of our students will be the priority. Updates on course delivery will be communicated to students and prospective students based on public health guidelines and advice. |
Course Content |
Expand+Course overview
The cluster is committed to the development of gender-focused research across a range of issues and disciplines within the School of Political Science and Sociology. Research in this area investigates the operation of gendered power ...
Hide-Course overview
The cluster is committed to the development of gender-focused research across a range of issues and disciplines within the School of Political Science and Sociology. Research in this area investigates the operation of gendered power relations, gender inequalities, changing notions of gender identity, and the challenges of achieving women's empowerment in Ireland and beyond in a context of globalisation.
Admission to a research degree in Women's Studies is based on a proposal from the applicant following discussion with the potential supervisor. Candidates for the PhD would usually be expected to hold a Master's degree in a cognate field. Applicants holding equivalent qualifications and/or relevant experience will also be considered.
As part of the doctoral training available on the Structured PhD programme, students avail themselves of a range of interdisciplinary taught modules.
The wide menu of available options include modules that:
- are Discipline-Specific in that they augment the student’s existing knowledge in their specialist area, e.g., gender perspectives on social science research
- are Dissertation-Specific in that they supply core skills which are essential to completion of the research project e.g. qualitative and quantitative research methods
- acknowledge a student’s professional development, e.g., presentation of a paper at an International Conference
- enhance a student’s employability through generic training, e.g., Careers Workshops, Computer literacy.
Each student will be assigned a primary Supervisor(s) and a Graduate Research Committee made up of experienced researchers to plan their programme of study and to provide on-going support to their research.
|
Research Areas |
Expand+Areas of interest:
Dr. Niamh Reilly
The gender dimensions of human rights as a legal, ethical and political paradigm. This includes examination of the role of human rights in transnational and local feminisms and of competing women's human rights ...
Hide-Areas of interest:
Dr. Niamh Reilly
The gender dimensions of human rights as a legal, ethical and political paradigm. This includes examination of the role of human rights in transnational and local feminisms and of competing women's human rights concerns in multicultural contexts. Her current research is concerned with the interplay of religion and women's human rights.
Dr. Anne Byrne
Gender, identity, inequality, stigma, rurality, biographical-narrative qualitative research methodologies and historical sociology
Ms. Mary Clancy
Constructions and interpretations of public citizenship during periods of imperial distress, evolving agrarian, poor law and local democracy and post-women’s suffrage and post-revolutionary contexts, with attention to biographical narratives and the West of Ireland.
Dr. Nata Duvvury
Gender, livelihoods, governance and social mobilisation, gender and development (with particular emphasis on gender inequality), domestic violence, rights-based approached to development, and civil society participation and accountability.
Dr. Kate Kenny
Identity and power in contemporary workplaces, and the use of post-structuralist feminist theory to explore these phenomena; gender and ethnicity, and how these relate to capitalist flows of power.
Dr. Vesna Malesevic
Religion and religious organisations, especially the Catholic Church, sexuality and LGBT (lesbian, gay, bi-sexual and trans-gendered) issues, civil society, Irish society and Central and Eastern Europe.
|
Further Enquiries |
Dr. Nata Duvvury
School of Political Science and Sociology
Aras Moyola, Room 219
T. 353 (0)91 495 399
E. Nata.duvvury@nuigalway.ie |
Course Web Page |
Web Page - Click Here |
International Students |
Web Page - Click Here |
|
|