国际学生入学条件
The Department of History offers a PhD program centered on rigorous research within a vibrant and diverse intellectual community. While most of our students have a history degree (BA) or degrees (BA and MA), we accept students with a variety of backgrounds and interests. Your writing sample should be a complete self-contained work. The ideal sample should be in the field of history (or a closely related field) that you plan to pursue at Chicago. Include the class or publication for which the sample was written. For papers longer than twenty-five pages, please flag a section for the committee.
Your candidate statement should explore specific academic interests and explain how they fit with our faculty's research and teaching strengths. You should discuss your preparation for graduate study and, where applicable to your scholarly plan, your language training and preparation.
The most helpful letters of recommendation come from faculty members who can access your ability to work on your proposed historical topic.
The GRE requirement cannot be waived, the history subject test is not required, successful applicants generally have high GRE scores.
There is no minimum foreign language requirement to enter the program, but successful applicants should possess strong language skills in their proposed research language(s) and be aware of the language requirements for the various fields. All students are required to take a language exam in the first quarter of the program. The University of Chicago accepts either the internet-Based Test (iBT) of the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) for the purpose of meeting the English language requirement. Minimum required scores in the IELTS are an overall score of 7, with sub scores of 7 in each section. The Minimum TOEFL Score - No less than 25 on each subsection(100)
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雅思考试总分
7.0
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:7
- 托福网考总分:100
- 托福笔试总分:160
- 其他语言考试:NA
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
全球登记册中的人权历史才刚刚开始被讲述。直到1998年末,《美国历史评论》的任何一篇文章都没有单独提及1948年《世界人权宣言》。到2006年,这一领域已经变得足够突出,以至于美国历史协会主席宣称我们都是人权的历史学家。不管是欧洲的十八世纪革命的历史,十九世纪的反奴隶制运动还是二十世纪的民权运动,权利史讲当然都是学术实践的一部分。在美国。现在,历史学家已经开始在全球或跨国范围内考虑人权。
The history-of-rights talk has of course been part of scholarly practice for some time, whether it be histories of eighteenth-century revolutions in Europe and the Americas, the antislavery campaigns of the nineteenth century or the twentieth-century civil-rights movement in the United States. Now historians have begun to consider human rights on a global or transnational scale. The initial work in this new scholarly field focused on the making of international and regional human rights norms, such as the UDHR and conventions on genocide and statelessness. More recently scholars have begun to excavate the global explosion of human-rights thought and practice throughout the twentieth century, from more traditional concerns with political and civil rights to novel claims for economic, social, cultural, sexual, and indigenous rights. Historians have also begun to re-examine human-rights history before the twentieth century, using a global frame to rethink eighteenth-century Enlightenment rights talk, the turn to humanitarianism in the nineteenth century and its entanglements with empire and calls for international protections of minority rights at the beginning of the last century. In part the new human-rights history explores how norms, political institutions, legal regimes, the state, and civil society have shaped the human-rights past. It also offers densely textured microhistories of the myriad and complex local instantiations of human rights politics in the Euro-American world and in the global South.
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