Join a diverse community of PhD students making an original research contribution to the field of knowledge in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies (IMES). What to do before you apply for a PhD in IMESBefore you formally apply for a PhD in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies (IMES) through the University of Edinburgh’s online system, you are advised to acquaint yourself with the department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies so that you are confident we are the best place for you to undertake your research.We would usually expect candidates to take the following steps before applying for a PhD: Step oneHave a look at the research interests and expertise of our staff under Who can supervise your PhD. While you do not need to find a member of staff willing to supervise your project before applying, please do take some time to read over staff members’ profiles, research interests, and publications, to ensure that your project is something we can effectively supervise. We are much more likely to supervise a project if it closely relates to our own expertise and research interests, and often have to reject candidates with strong applications because their proposed project falls outside our areas of specialisation. Who can supervise your PhD The following members of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies staff supervise PhD and MSc by Research students. Follow the links to find out more about their research interests and expertise.NameRoleDr Ines Asceric-ToddLecturer in Arabic and Middle Eastern CulturesDr Elvire CorbozSenior Lecturer in Contemporary Islam and the Middle EastDr Andreas GörkeSenior Lecturer in Islamic StudiesDr Anthony GormanSenior Lecturer in Modern Middle Eastern HistoryDr Marie LegendreLecturer in Islamic HistoryDr Giulia LiberatoreLecturer in Muslims in EuropeDr Ebtihal MahadeenLecturer in Gender and Media Studies of the Middle EastProfessor Andrew NewmanPersonal Chair of Islamic Studies and PersianProfessor Nacim Pak-ShirazProfessor of Cinema and IranProfessor Frédéric VolpiChair in Politics of the Muslim World Step twoSubmit an informal PhD application; this allows you and the department to gauge the interest in your research project before you apply formally.There are two required documents to submit an informal PhD application: the pre-application form and the PhD proposal. We cannot consider any informal applications missing one of these documents. We value your privacy and will hold your information in line with the University of Edinburgh’s Privacy Policy for Applicants. Pre-application form Complete our pre-application form PhD proposalRead our guidelines for writing a PhD proposal (below) and submit your proposal to imespgr@ed.ac.uk Guidelines for writing a PhD proposal A research proposal is one of the most important elements of your application. It helps us understand the general and specific areas of your research interests, the originality and importance of your topic, and the feasibility of the proposed project within the given timescale.Your research proposal should be around 2,000 - 2,500 words long.It should describe in some detail the project that you want to complete for the award of the PhD and provide evidence of your engagement with the topic by addressing the following questions:What is already known about this topic? What are the key works and who are the prominent scholars in the field? Which aspects of this topic have generated discussion and which warrant further investigation? By addressing these points, you can demonstrate that you are aware of previous scholarship on the topic itself and related fields, and that you can critically engage with that scholarship.Which aspects of the topic do you propose to investigate? How does your project relate to previous scholarship, what is new and original in your research, and why is it important? By answering these questions, you can show that you are able to contextualise your own research within the broader field and demonstrate how it will advance and change our knowledge of the topic.What are the main primary sources you want to use for your research? Will your research involve previously unexamined primary sources, ‘new’ analyses of existing source materials or some combination of both? What methodologies will you use in your research project? This section of your proposal will explain how you will actually conduct your research, what your main sources will be, and how you will approach them.What possible problems and challenges can you anticipate with regard to your research, and how are you going to address these?Your proposal should include an indicative bibliography of primary and secondary sources that you have already identified as relevant to your research.Your proposal should also include a provisional timetable, describing the stages through which you hope your research will move, over the three years of your degree. It is crucial that, on the one hand, your chosen topic should be substantial enough to require around 80,000-100,000 words for its full exploration, and, on the other hand, that it has clear limits which would allow it to be completed in three years.It is in the nature of research that, when you begin, you don’t know what you’ll find. This means that your project is bound to change over the three years that you spend on it. So in submitting your proposal you are not committing yourself to completing exactly the project it describes in the event that you are accepted. Nevertheless, the research proposal should help you in devising a feasible and worthwhile research project, and it will allow us to assess the project, provide some feedback, and decide whether we will be able to supervise it.Submit your proposal by email Step threeOnce we review the documents submitted at Step two, we will get in touch with you with one of two outcomes:we may offer useful comments on your proposed research and encourage you to submit a formal PhD applicationwe may let you know that we have decided that we are unable to offer you PhD supervisionIf you are encouraged to submit a formal application, we strongly encourage you to incorporate our feedback into it. To apply for the PhD programme, you use the University's online system, Degree Finder - see more information and link under the 'Formal application' heading, below. Formal applicationYou can find out more about language requirements, facilities, fees, funding opportunities and application deadlines for this PhD programme, and formally apply to study on it, on the University of Edinburgh’s online Degree Finder. Take me to the University of Edinburgh's Degree Finder entry for the PhD in Isl… Get in touchFor further information or if you have any queries, please contact Dr Ebtihal Mahadeen, IMES Departmental Postgraduate Research Director.Email the IMES Departmental Postgraduate Research Director Related linksFunding opportunities This article was published on 2024-08-13