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Public Administration (PhD)

Our PhD program in Public Administration prepares you for research and leadership roles in government, universities and other institutions.

You'll gain an in-depth understanding of issues in comparative policy and governance and assist faculty members while you pursue your own externally-funded research. Our key fields of study are organizational studies, comparative policy and governance.

This is a full-time program. Students usually spend at least 75% of regular work time dedicated to studies.

Expected length Project or thesis Course-based
3-5 years (9-15 academic terms) Yes No

Quick facts

Program options:
Doctorate
Study options:
Full-time study
Program delivery:
On-campus, Online, Other: Combination

Outcomes

PhD in Public Administration students will:

  • work with experienced faculty members at the forefront of a wide variety of fields, including public policy analysis, governance and management
  • master basic research methods (e.g. foundational statistics, qualitative methods, quantitative methods and evaluation)
  • acquire in-depth academic understanding of issues in comparative policy, governance and organizational studies
  • participate in research projects through the school
  • build externally-funded research programs of their own
  • be prepared to conduct further leading-edge research after graduation
  • be prepared to take on leadership roles in government, universities and/or other public institutions

Find a supervisor

PhD students must have a faculty member who serves as their academic supervisor. When you apply:

  • you must list a potential supervisor on your application
  • this faculty member must agree to be your supervisor and recommend your admission
  • include an email from your supervisor with your application

To find a supervisor, review the faculty contacts. When you’ve found a faculty member whose research complements your own, contact them by email.

Astrid Brousselle

Professor Evaluation approaches and methods, Planetary Health, theory-based evaluation, ecological transition, public health, health system analysis, collaborative/participative/community based approaches, qualitative methods

David Castle

Professor Science, technology and innovation policy , Open science and research data

Dr. Sarah Marie Wiebe (she/her)

Assistant Professor and Academic Undergraduate Advisor Environmental justice, Public engagement, Critical policy studies, Climate emergencies and displacement, States of emergency, Interpretive research and arts-based methods, Community development, Indigenous community engagement and governance

Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly (he/his)

Professor & Jean Monnet Chair Border studies: border disputes, border security, border management, management of cross border regions; European Union: regional and urban policies, immigration and border security policies; Canada - United States border policies

Evert Lindquist

Professor Public sector and public service reform, Designing and implementing policy interventions, Digital and collaborative governance, Horizontal governance and administration to support policy interventions, Organizing for policy and administrative innovation, Role and influence of think tanks in policy networks, Competing values in public sector leadership and reform

Heather Castleden

Professor, Impact Chair in Transformative Governance for Planetary Health Transformative governance; Planetary health; Decolonizing energy; Decolonizing the academy; Climate change; Climate justice; Climate displacement; Renewable energy; Water; Social justice; Environmental racism; Health equity; Indigenous-Settler Relations; Research ethics; Relationality; Accountability; Indigenous Rights; Critical methods; Anti-colonial; Anti-racist; Participatory methods; Qualitative inquiry; Community-based participatory research

Helga Hallgrímsdóttir

Deputy Provost and Professor

J. Barton (Bart) Cunningham

Professor Human resource issues, Leadership, Organizational behaviour and change, Insight problem solving, Stress and mental health, Action learning and research

Jason Hicks

Assistant Professor Occupational Regulation, Public Policy, Labour Economics, Economic History

Jill Anne Chouinard

Director and Professor

Katya Rhodes

Assistant Professor Multi-attribute climate policy analysis, Political economy of climate policy, Pro-environmental behaviour, Survey-based methods, Energy-economy modelling, Comparative climate policy

Kimberly Speers

Associate Teaching Professor

Lynne Siemens

Associate Professor and Graduate Coordinator

Richard Marcy

Associate Professor

Robert Lapper, KC

Lam Chair in Law and Public Policy and Graduate Advisor Justice system policy and reform, Access to Justice, Indigenous law and legal issues, Technology and design in law and policy

Susanne Thiessen

Associate Director and Assistant Professor

Tamara Krawchenko

Assistant Professor Comparative public policy; regional development; sustainability transitions

Walter Lepore

Assistant Professor Organizational analysis and design, Organizational performance assessment, Program and policy monitoring and evaluation, Strategic planning, Transparency, accountability, corruption and conflict of interests in the public sector, Public sector reforms, Mixed methods research, Experimental research designs, Community-based participatory research, Capacity development in participatory research, Community-university research partnerships, Community development

Show me program details

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Your program details

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Application deadlines

  • September entry: apply by March 15
  • September entry: apply by December 15

Admission requirements

  • Completion of a master’s degree (or equivalent) from an institution recognized by UVic in a field equivalent to or related to public administration.
  • A grade point average of 7.0 or equivalent in or related to the field of public administration.

If your first language is not English, you must provide proof of language proficiency. Learn more about language requirements, including allowable exemptions and tests.

Review our general admission requirements for more information.

Program specific requirements

  • Two assessment reports from academic referees. If it has been more than five years since you last attended a post-secondary institution, we recommend that you include three assessment reports from current or former employers in place of academic referees. To strengthen your application, we recommend that your referees attach a letter of reference in addition to the assessment report.
  • A professional resume
  • A letter of intent (max. 5 single-spaced pages) that gives:
    • an overview of your proposed area for dissertation research including the problem to be studied, possible literature and general approach
    • the names of faculty identified as possible research supervisors
    • a list of applications submitted for external funding
  • Completion of a master’s degree (or equivalent) from an institution recognized by UVic in a field equivalent to or related to public administration.
  • A grade point average of 7.0 or equivalent in or related to the field of public administration.
  • GMAT or GRE results, not more than 2 years old

If your first language is not English, you must provide proof of language proficiency. Learn more about language requirements, including allowable exemptions and tests.

Review our general admission requirements for more information.

Program specific requirements

  • Names and email addresses of at least two academic referees. They may also submit a letter with the assessment to strengthen your application. If it has been over five years since you last attended a post-secondary institution, you may include three professional references from work-related supervisors instead of academic referees. Professional references will be required to submit a letter only and will not be asked to submit an assessment report. You’ll be asked for the name and email addresses of your referees during the online application process and the Graduate Admissions office will contact them.
  • A professional resume
  • A letter of intent (max. 5 single-spaced pages) that gives:
    • an overview of your proposed area for dissertation research including the problem to be studied, possible literature and general approach
    • the names of faculty identified as possible research supervisors
    • a list of applications submitted for external funding

Completion requirements

View the minimum course requirements for this program.

View the minimum course requirements for this program.

Funding & aid

Tuition & fees

Estimated minimum program cost*

* Based on an average program length. For a per term fee breakdown view the tuition fee estimator.

Estimated values determined by the tuition fee estimator shall not be binding to the University of Victoria.

Ready to apply?

You can start your online application to UVic by creating a new profile or using an existing one.

Apply now    How to apply

Need help?

Contact the graduate administrative assistant at paservice@uvic.ca.

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