M.A. in Philosophy, Law, and Policy

The M.A. program in Philosophy, Law, and Policy addresses policy questions by relating theory and practice. It is a collaboration between the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, the Law School, the Lynch School of Education and Human Development, and the School of Theology and Ministry, and housed in the Philosophy Department.聽

Program Details

The program is designed for completion within four semesters, but a longer trajectory can be arranged. In consultation with a program advisor, students focus their own paths of inquiry by choosing from among electives across the participating schools and departments.聽There is no language requirement, although for students whose areas of research require competency in a particular language, the study of that language is strongly encouraged. Language courses do not count toward the ten required for the degree.

Students must maintain a 3.0 GPA to remain in good standing in the program.

The degree consists of ten courses, or the equivalent, including foundations, electives, and a capstone course. Students must meet with the Director of the program or other designated advisor before registering each semester. On approval by the Director, students may use previous credits to place out of PLP Foundations requirements, with the exception of the foundational Philosophy requirement, the Capstone requirement, and the overall number of credits (30) required for the degree, taking electives instead.

The structure and requirements of the program are organized as follows

Foundations, consisting in a total of five courses

  • Philosophy Foundation: Engaged Philosophy, taught in the Philosophy Department, serves as the keystone cohort-building course that instructs students in combining philosophical inquiry with analysis of contemporary issues and policy questions at the intersections of ethics, political theory, law, and the social sciences. To be taken in the first semester (Fall).
  • Law Foundation: One course to be taken in the first or second semester (Fall or Spring) in Law School, chosen from the following:
    • Foundations of Western Law
    • American Legal History
    • Constitutional Theory
    • American Legal Theory

Or other courses in the Law School to be approved by the Director

  • Legal Philosophy Foundation: A course in philosophy of law, to be taken from a designated list taught in the Law School or the Philosophy Department.
  • Analysis Foundation: A to be taken from an approved list of courses offered by participating departments. For most students, the approved course in the methodology of quantitative analysis will be Sociology 7702, Introduction to Statistics and Data Analysis. Courses in other departments covering methodologies of social science analysis may be substituted with the Director approval. Students particularly interested in analysis are encouraged to take Sociology 7703, Multivariate Statistics, after Sociology 7702.聽
  • Policy Foundation: One course on one or more policy questions and the context for their meaning, implementation, and assessment, to be taken from a list of applicable courses offered by participating schools and departments.聽

Electives

Four courses, chosen in consultation with the PLP Director or designated advisor to focus each student track of study. These may also be taken at partner universities in 51动漫 consortium.聽

Capstone

One course, chosen in consultation with the PLP Director, to serve as a conclusion to each student focused area of study. This may take one of two forms:

Thesis course

Recommended for students intending further graduate study. Students wishing to do a thesis must first consult with the Director the semester before registering for the thesis course, and the Director must approve the thesis project. The student must secure an advisor for the thesis project before registration in order to be eligible for the thesis option. The course will result in a qualifying paper that could serve as writing sample in applying to other graduate programs.

Focused coursework

Some students may have a particular professional or academic expertise that they wish to improve through a specific course, such as in advanced statistical techniques. Other students may have an academic interest or career goal that they wish to advance through a specific course, such as in environmental law and policy. To take this option, the student must consult with the Director before registering for the course, and they must communicate with the course instructor and arrange for a focused research project to complete as a final project in the course (sometimes in addition to the regular course requirements).

For their electives, students choose their courses primarily from offerings in the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, the Law School, the Lynch School of Education, and the School of Theology and Ministry at Boston College. The main participating departments in the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences are: Economics, History, Philosophy, Political Science, Psychology and Neuroscience, Sociology, and Theology. Coursework in other departments is possible after consultation with the Program Director and permission of the course instructor.

Some departments have strict prerequisites for their graduate courses. Before registering, students must consult with their advisor and with the instructor of courses outside of Philosophy to determine if these electives are appropriate for their program of studies and if the student has the requisite background. Students also have access to courses in philosophy at other member institutions of the Boston Area Consortium: Boston University, Tufts University, and Brandeis University. By application, they can also participate in other consortiums with area institutions and Boston College.

Late in their second semester of coursework, students choose a specific focus for their coursework. While this is not a formal concentration, and can be changed, the coursework focus is important for advising and the selection of electives. The focus is up to the student to design, so long as it fits with the program parameters; examples include environmental policy, constitutional politics, administrative decision-making, data analysis for policy making, philosophy of law, religion and governance, and so on.

All students are mentored by an advisor assigned in their first year. Once they choose their focus for elective coursework, students are encouraged to choose an advisor appropriate to their own specific interests.

Each of the following sample courses of study, using electives assume four of the five Foundations and one Capstone courses as described in the Requirements section. Note that the Capstone course should also address the student area of focus.

  • Philosophy: 淓ngaged Philosophy Fall, first year
  • Law: Choice of either 淎merican Legal History or 淎merican Legal Theory or 淔oundations of Western Legal Theory or 淐onstitutional Theory in the Law School Fall or Spring, any year
  • Legal Philosophy: Taken either as 淧hilosophy of Law in the Law School or in Philosophy; the PHIL course 淟aw and Interpretation can also fulfill this requirement Fall or Spring, first year
  • Data Analysis: 淚ntroduction to Statistics and Data Analysis in Sociology or suitable substitution, Fall, first year
  • Capstone: Taken in the final semester, either as a Thesis course, Focused Coursework, or an Internship that serves to complete the student integrative design of their course of study.

Sample Focus 1: Legal Theory

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淐ybersecurity Policy: Privacy and Legal Requirements in the Law School.
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the director, such as those listed above but not taken for Law Foundation or Legal Philosophy Foundation, as well as courses such as 淐onstitutional History: The Framing of the Constitution, and 淔uture of Constitutional Democracy in the Law School

Sample Focus 2: Policy Analytics

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淪ocial Issues and Social Policy in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the Director, such as Multivariate Statistics and 淟ongitudinal Data Analysis in Sociology, 淟aw, Policy, and Politics of Higher Education in the (Inter)National Context in the Lynch School of Education and Human development, and 淗ealthcare Law and Compliance in the Law School

Sample Focus 3: Race, Division, and Depolarization

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淩ace, Policing, and the Constitution in the Law School
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the Director, such as 淧hilosophical Hermeneutics on Race and Justice in Philosophy, 淩ace, Culture, and Power in History, 淩ace, Freedom, and the Bible in America in Theology, 淧articipatory Action Research: Gender, Race, Power in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development

Sample Focus 4: Technology and the Environment

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options in various departments at the graduate level, any year, such as 淓nergy Law and Deregulation in the Law School
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the Director, such as 淭echnology and Culture and 淗ow to Save the World: Ethics of Climate Change in Philosophy, 淏iotechnologies, Health, and Theological Ethics in Theology, and 淓nvironmental Sociology

Sample Focus 5: Service-Learning Pedagogy

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淎ssessment of and for Learning in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development
  • Electives: Four, including in the first year the two-semester sequence, 淧hilosophy and the Pedagogy of Service Learning (aka, 淕rad PULSE) in the Philosophy Department, and two others as approved by the director, such as 淪upporting Positive Behavior in Schools and Community and 淓thics and Equity in Education in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development

Sample Focus 6: Ethical Life and Social Dynamics

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淟aw, Policy, and Politics of Higher Education in the (Inter)National Context in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the director, such as 淥rigins of Virtue and 淐urrent Topics in Moral Psychology in Psychology and Neuroscience, 淐hristian Ethics in Migration in Theology, 淓thical Principles in Comparative Perspectives in Philosophy

Sample Focus 7: Violence, Non-Violence, and Justice

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淚mmigration: Processes, Politics, and Policies in Political Science.
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the director, such as 淭he Ethics of Peace and War in Philosophy, 淔rom Revolution to Human Rights: Histories of Violence and Non-Violence in History, 淭ransitional Justice in Comparative Perspectives in the Law School, 淭errorism in America in History, and 淧sychology of Trauma: Cross-Cultural and Social Justice in the Lynch School of Education and Human Development

Sample Focus 8: Religion and Civic Life

  • Policy: A choice from a set of approved options, such as 淟aw and Religion in the Law School
  • Electives: Four, as approved by the director, such as 淛ews and Christians: Understanding the Other in Theology, 淧ublic Theology, Politics, and Faith in the United States and 淔aith and Justice: Liberation Theologies in the U.S. in the School of Theology and Ministry, and 淓thics, Religion, and International Politics in Philosophy.

Philosophy, Law, and Policy is closely affiliated with the聽Public Philosophy Initiative at Boston College, which offers workshops in skills useful for practical philosophy and hosts an annual conference, usually in Spring. For more information on this, contact Professor Fried.

The program is also closely connected to two centers at Boston College: the Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy and the Rappaport Center for Law and Public Policy. These centers offer regular programming, such as speaker events and student colloquiums.

Contact Us

For specific questions about the Philosophy department's graduate programs please contact the Graduate Program Assistant, Christopher Hanlon.聽All other requests on the application process should be made to the Graduate School at the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences.
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