What does it mean to be a global citizen? How do local and global beliefs, events, and institutions travel across and structure the world we live in today?
GST addresses these questions by exploring the economic, cultural, and political systems that unite and divide people across the world. Faculty who teach in GST work across a wide range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields, including history, anthropology, sociology, political economy, cultural and media studies, environmental science, and the scholarship of human rights. GST students learn to think critically about the history and practice of globalization through interpretation, empirical research, and project-based learning.
Graduating GST students are particularly well-equipped to pursue professional careers or advanced study in public policy, business, international relations, community and non-governmental organizations, law, education, media and cultural studies, and area studies.
Leslie Ashbaugh, Constantin Behler, Bruce Burgett, Steve Collins, Colin Danby, Jane Decker, Martha Groom, Bruce Kochis, Ron Krabill, Gen McCoy, Alan Wood
While there are no official requirements, students choosing this degree option will find it especially helpful to have completed college coursework in economics, world history and culture, statistics, political science, geography, anthropology, and foreign languages.