Ph.D. in Anthropology

Ph.D. in Anthropology is a research-intensive degree that examines human communities, cultures, behaviors, and biological evolution over time and geography. The program typically lasts 3-5 years and includes the four major subfields of anthropology: cultural anthropology, archaeology, biological (physical) anthropology, and linguistic anthropology. Students do unique study on areas such as human evolution, social structures, cultural practices, ethnographic fieldwork, human genetics, and archeology of ancient civilizations. Graduates of the program frequently work in academia, research institutes, museums, government agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and cultural heritage protection. Admission typically needs a Master's degree in anthropology or a similar subject, as well as good research and analytical skills in ethnographic methodologies, fieldwork, and data analysis.