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The graduate/professional certificate in REECAS provides graduate students with a general background in the areas of anthropology, economics, foreign policy, geography, government and politics, history, language and literature, law, and sociology. It also provides specific knowledge about one of these areas. With its emphasis on interdisciplinary study, a REECAS certificate enhances the training of PhD candidates who wish to teach and do research at the college level, and serves the needs of MA and PhD students who wish to make a career in public service, journalism, library and information studies, or other professions requiring a well-rounded acquaintance with this diverse and highly important area.

Admissions

All Graduate School students must utilize the Graduate Student Portal in MyUW to add, change, or discontinue any graduate/professional certificate. To apply to this certificate, log in to MyUW, click on Graduate Student Portal, and then click on Add/Change Programs. Select the information for the certificate for which you are applying. Professional students in the careers of Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, and Veterinary cannot add the certificate in the Graduate Student Portal, and should contact the program for more information.

The certificate coordinator will review your application for admittance, and reach out to you if there are any further questions.

Requirements

Required Courses

Students must complete 12 credits in Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies (REECAS) core courses distributed over three distinct subject listings from the lists below. Language classes are not applicable to the 12-credit requirement. All 12 credits must be in REECAS area studies content classes and include:

  • At least 6 credits must be graduate-level coursework (i.e., courses numbered 700 or above, or 300 or above with the Grad 50% designation). 
  • At least one course (3 credits) must be a graduate-level seminar in which a research paper on the region (Russia, East Europe, Central Asia) is written, utilizing original source material in the target language(s).

Language Requirement

In addition to the required 12 credits in area studies content classes, students must demonstrate a working knowledge of one of the languages of Russia, Eastern and Central Europe, and/or Eurasia. This requirement may be met through two years of university language study (or the equivalent) in one of the region’s languages. At UW-Madison, Kazakh, Persian, Polish, Russian, Turkish, and Ukrainian are offered regularly during the academic year.

General Courses

A A E/​ECON/​REAL EST/​URB R PL  306The Real Estate Process3
A A E/​INTL ST  374The Growth and Development of Nations in the Global Economy3
A A E/​ECON  474Economic Problems of Developing Areas3
ASIAN/​AFRICAN/​RELIG ST  370Islam: Religion and Culture3-4
ANTHRO 330Topics in Ethnology (Jews of Central & Eastern Europe)3-4
ANTHRO 330Topics in Ethnology (People & Culture - Cen&East Eur)3-4
ANTHRO 330Topics in Ethnology (Peoples & Cultures-Russia)3-4
ANTHRO 690Problems in Anthropology (Late Pleistocene of E. Eurasia)3-4
ANTHRO 690Problems in Anthropology (Nationalisms & Modern Wars)3-4
ANTHRO 690Problems in Anthropology (Understanding Human Rights)3-4
ART HIST 310Icons, Religion, and Empire: Early Christian and Byzantine Art, ca. 200-14533
ART HIST 556Proseminar in 20th Century European Art (Art & Visual Culture of WWI)3
ART HIST 556Proseminar in 20th Century European Art (Art in Europe, 1945-1975)3
ART HIST 556Proseminar in 20th Century European Art (Artistic Nat'l: Internat'l Age)3
ART HIST 556Proseminar in 20th Century European Art (European Interwar Art)3
ART HIST 556Proseminar in 20th Century European Art (Fascist/Totalitarian Modernity)3
ART HIST 805Seminar-Ancient Art and Architecture (Achaemenid Persia)3
ART HIST 805Seminar-Ancient Art and Architecture (Persia: The First World Empire)3
ART HIST 815Seminar-Medieval Art (Icons and the Senses)3
ART HIST 815Seminar-Medieval Art (Sem: Holy Image-East Orth Cult)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (Art & Visual Culture of WWI)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (Art in Europe, 1945-1975)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (European Avant-Garde:1900-1950)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (European Interwar Art)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (Fascist/Totalitarian Modernity)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (Grd Smr-20th C Eur Art:Hrd Art)3
ART HIST 856Graduate Seminar in Twentieth Century European Art (Nat'lism in Era of Internat'l)3
COM ARTS 463Avant-Garde Film3
COM ARTS 958Seminar in Film History2-3
ECON/​A A E/​REAL EST/​URB R PL  306The Real Estate Process3
ECON 390Contemporary Economic Issues3-4
ECON 467International Industrial Organizations3-4
ECON/​A A E  474Economic Problems of Developing Areas3
FOLKLORE/​LITTRANS  347In Translation: Kalevala and Finnish Folk-Lore3-4
FOLKLORE/​RELIG ST  352Shamanism3
FOLKLORE/​SCAND ST  443Sami Culture, Yesterday and Today4
FOLKLORE 460Folk Epics3
GEOG 318Introduction to Geopolitics3
GEOG 518Power, Place, Identity3
GEOG 918Seminar in Political Geography2-3
GNS 324Literatures of Central Asia3
HISTORY/​MEDIEVAL/​RELIG ST  309The Crusades: Christianity and Islam3-4
HISTORY 357The Second World War3-4
HISTORY 359History of Europe Since 19453-4
HISTORY 417History of Russia3-4
HISTORY 418History of Russia3-4
HISTORY 419History of Soviet Russia3-4
HISTORY 420Russian Social and Intellectual History3-4
HISTORY 424The Soviet Union and the World, 1917-19913-4
HISTORY 500Reading Seminar in History (East European Jewry 1648-1945)3
HISTORY 500Reading Seminar in History (Holocaust: Destructn-Eur Jewry)3
HISTORY/​CURRIC/​ED POL/​JEWISH  515Holocaust: History, Memory and Education3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Central Asia)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Cold War on Ice: 1972)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Holocaust Victims & Survivors)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Russia & Its Crisis 1900-1917)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Russia's Great War, 1914-1917)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Russia/America 1880s-1960s)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Soviet Hist - Memoirs)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Stalin and Hitler)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Totalitarianism)3
HISTORY 600Advanced Seminar in History (Twentieth Century Central Asia)3
HISTORY 753Seminar-Comparative World History1-3
HISTORY/​FRENCH/​GERMAN/​POLI SCI/​SOC  804Interdisciplinary Western European Area Studies Seminar3
HISTORY 850Smr-Hist of the Soviet Union & Modern Hist of E Central Europe1-3
HISTORY 891Proseminar in Modern European History1-3
JOURN 620International Communication4
LITTRANS/​FOLKLORE  347In Translation: Kalevala and Finnish Folk-Lore3-4
POLI SCI 334Russian Politics3-4
POLI SCI 340The European Union: Politics and Political Economy3-4
POLI SCI/​INTL ST  439The Comparative Study of Genocide3-4
POLI SCI/​FRENCH/​GERMAN/​HISTORY/​SOC  804Interdisciplinary Western European Area Studies Seminar3
POLI SCI 814Social Identities: Definition and Measurement3
POLI SCI 854Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict3
POLI SCI 948Seminar: Topics in Comparative Politics (Authoritarian Politics and Ins)3
POLI SCI 948Seminar: Topics in Comparative Politics (Nondemocratic Politics)3
POLI SCI 948Seminar: Topics in Comparative Politics (Post-Communist Politics)3
SCAND ST/​FOLKLORE  443Sami Culture, Yesterday and Today4
SCAND ST/​MEDIEVAL  444Kalevala and Finnish Folk-Lore4
SLAVIC 405Women in Russian Literature3-4
SLAVIC 420Chekhov3-4
SLAVIC 421Gogol3-4
SLAVIC 422Dostoevsky3-4
SLAVIC 424Tolstoy3-4
SLAVIC 433History of Russian Culture3
SLAVIC 434Contemporary Russian Culture3
SLAVIC 470History of Polish Literature until 18633
SLAVIC 701Survey of Old Russian Literature2
SLAVIC 702Eighteenth-Century Russian Literature2
SLAVIC 705Special Topics in Russian Language/Linguistics3
SLAVIC 755Topics in Slavic Literature1-3
SLAVIC 801Slavic Critical Theory and Practice3
SLAVIC 802The Structure of Russian2
SLAVIC 803Introduction to Old Church Slavonic and the History of Russian Literary Language2
SLAVIC 804Methods of Teaching Slavic Languages2
SLAVIC 820College Teaching of Russian1
SLAVIC 900Seminar: Slavic Literature and Culture1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (Anti-Semitism in Eur Culture)1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (On Russia's War in Ukraine)1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (Pop & Society in Contem Russia)1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (Pop & Society in Former USSR)1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (Soc, Cul, Pol Contemp Russia)1-3
SOC 496Topics in Sociology (Sociology of Eastern Europe)1-3
POLI SCI 401Selected Topics in Political Science (The Soviet Jewish Experience)3-4
SOC 633Social Stratification3

Seminar Courses

GEOG 918Seminar in Political Geography2-3
HISTORY 753Seminar-Comparative World History1-3
HISTORY 850Smr-Hist of the Soviet Union & Modern Hist of E Central Europe1-3
HISTORY 891Proseminar in Modern European History1-3
POLI SCI 854Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict3
SLAVIC 800Proseminar-Slavic Literature and Culture1
SLAVIC 900Seminar: Slavic Literature and Culture1-3

Language Courses

ASIALANG 355First Semester Asian Language for Graduate Students (Persian)4
ASIALANG 356Second Semester Asian Language for Graduate Students (Persian)4
ASIALANG 357Third Semester Asian Language for Graduate Students (Persian)4
ASIALANG 358Fourth Semester Asian Language for Graduate Students (Persian)4
ASIALANG 337Fifth Semester Persian3-4
ASIALANG 338Sixth Semester Persian3-4
GNS 331First Semester Kazakh4
GNS 332Second Semester Kazakh4
GNS 339First Semester Turkish4
GNS 340Second Semester Turkish4
GNS 351First Semester Central Eurasian Language4
GNS 352Second Semester Central Eurasian Language4
GNS 370Topics in GNS (Intermediate)3
GNS 431Third Semester Kazakh4
GNS 432Fourth Semester Kazakh4
GNS 439Third Semester Turkish4
GNS 440Fourth Semester Turkish4
GNS 451Third Semester Central Eurasian Language4
GNS 452Fourth Semester Central Eurasian Language4
GNS 531Fifth Semester Kazakh3-4
GNS 532Sixth Semester Kazakh3-4
GNS 539Fifth Semester Turkish and Azeri3-4
GNS 540Sixth Semester Turkish and Azeri3-4
GNS 551Fifth Semester Central Eurasian Language4
GNS 552Sixth Semester Central Eurasian Language4
SLAVIC 301Introduction to Intensive Polish3
SLAVIC 304Fourth Semester Intensive Polish4
SLAVIC 305Fifth Semester Intensive Polish3
SLAVIC 306Sixth Semester Intensive Polish3
SLAVIC 315Russian Language and Culture I3
SLAVIC 316Russian Language and Culture II3
SLAVIC 321Fourth Year Russian I3
SLAVIC 322Fourth Year Russian II3
SLAVIC 331Fourth Year Polish I3
SLAVIC 332Fourth Year Polish II3
SLAVIC 351First Semester Intensive Czech3
SLAVIC 352Second Semester Intensive Czech3
SLAVIC 451Third Semester Intensive Czech3
SLAVIC 452Fourth Semester Intensive Czech3
SLAVIC 705Special Topics in Russian Language/Linguistics3

Learning Outcomes

  1. Regional expertise: advanced knowledge of the societies and cultures of the region through in-depth understanding of the principal historical, social, political, cultural and scientific forces and conditions that have given rise to the unity and diversity in the region today.
  2. Multi-disciplinarity: analyzing contemporary political, economic, and cultural realities in the region from at least two disciplinary perspectives, ideally including humanities, social sciences and sometimes natural science approaches.
  3. Depth of knowledge: advanced knowledge of particular facets of life in the region by taking courses on particular sub-regions or countries, by studying a regional language, or by taking at least two courses on the region in one discipline
  4. Research and methods: Students must demonstrate the ability to conduct interdisciplinary research that shows knowledge of research methodologies, demonstrates analytical skills, and the ability to articulate and elaborate research findings.