
M.A. IN NEAR EASTERN STUDIES WITH A BUSINESS
OPTION (With the Leonard N. Stern School of
Business)
The Master of Arts degree in Near Eastern Studies with a Business
Option prepares students to work in organizations that require
research on business and finance in the Middle East. Graduate business
courses for the degree are offered through NYU's Leonard N. Stern
School of Business. Students are advised by the Kevorkian Center
director of graduate studies. The 40 point degree consists of 25
points in Middle Eastern studies and 15 points of business courses.
There is no language requirement, but students are encouraged to
develop a competence in a Middle Eastern language and can apply
for the Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships. Applicants to the business option should have taken undergraduate calculus and introductory economics courses, or the equivalent.
The required Middle Eastern Studies courses are:
Middle Eastern
Studies:
Problems and Methods in Middle Eastern Studies (G77.1687),
History of the Middle East 1750 to the Present (G77.1642), or,
with the approval of the director, an advanced history seminar,
and Economics of the Middle East (G31.1608), and at least one course
from one of the following disciplines: Anthropology, Politics,
and Sociology. For example, Anthropology for Middle East Studies
(G14.1322), Middle East Government and Politics (G53.2590) or Sociology
of the Middle East (G68.2785).
There are four required courses for the Business
Option, totaling 12 points: Statistics & Data Analysis B01.1305 (3 pts.); Financial
Accounting & Reporting B01.1306 (3 pts.); Understanding Firms & Markets
B01.1303 (3 pts.);
The Global Economy B01.2303 (3 pts.);
The distribution requirement can be satisfied
by completing one of the following 3 point courses: either Managing
Organizations B01.1302; Marketing: Delivering Value to Customers & Businesses
B01.2310; Foundations of Finance B01.3211;
Strategy B01.2301; or Competitive Advantage from Operations B01.2314.
Graduate School of Arts & Science students
are limited to 6 points of Stern classes per semester, and students
should plan their schedules accordingly in order to finish the
business requirements. Students with
an undergraduate business major or minor may be able to waive
some of the above business core courses, with the permission
of the director of graduate studies, if they have taken equivalent
courses and enroll in elective business classes.
Students accepted to the Stern School of Business may add an informal
concentration in Middle Eastern studies to their M.B.A. program.
Full-time students in the Stern School are eligible for Foreign
Language and Area Studies Fellowships, provided they will be studying
a Middle Eastern language and enroll in courses with Middle East
content.
For further information, contact the Hagop Kevorkian
Center at (212) 998-8877 or e-mail us at
kevorkian.center@nyu.edu.
You may visit the Stern School of Business website
at http://www.stern.nyu.edu/
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