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Creative & Cultural Industries PhD

Creative & Cultural Industries PhD

Different course options

Study mode

Full time

Duration

3 years

Start date

SEP-26

Key information
DATA SOURCE : IDP Connect

Qualification type

PhD/DPhil - Doctor of Philosophy

Subject areas

Computer Science Entrepreneurship

Course Summary

Our Cultural Industries subject area and Centre for Cultural Policy Research have a highly experienced team of postgraduate supervisors. We are home to a thriving group of postgraduate research students, that interact with staff through a regular programme of workshops and seminars.

Tuition fees

UK fees
Course fees for UK students

Contact University and ask about this fee

International fees
Course fees for EU and international students

For this course (per year)

£27,720

Entry requirements

Our regular standard of admission is at least an Upper Second Class Honours degree (2:1), although candidates will usually also have completed or be undertaking a Masters qualification.

Research outline

Candidates are required to provide an outline of the proposed research subject in about 1000 words. This need not be your final thesis proposal but should include:

  • a straightforward, descriptive, and informative title
  • the question that your research will address
  • an account of why this question is important and worth investigating
  • an assessment of how your own research will engage with recent study in the subject
  • a brief account of the methodology and approach you will take
  • a discussion of the primary sources that your research will draw upon, including printed books, manuscripts, archives, libraries, or museums
  • an indicative bibliography of secondary sources that you have already consulted and/or are planning to consult

Your application, including your references and research proposal, will be passed to members of staff whose expertise and research interests most closely match the area of your proposed study.

University information

The University of Glasgow is the fourth oldest university in the English-speaking world, founded back in 1451. Alumni include eight Nobel Prize winners, Scotland’s First Minister and a Prime Minister, while Albert Einstein gave a seminal lecture on the theory of relativity there in 1933. The university consists of four colleges: College of Arts and Humanities College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences College of Science and...more