Master of International Affairs (MIA)
Master of International Affairs (MIA)
Overview
The Master of International Affairs (MIA) at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) is a rigorous, policy-focused degree that prepares students to address complex global challenges through interdisciplinary analysis, contextual understanding, and professional engagement. Grounded in the principles of international relations and public policy, the MIA curriculum fosters both intellectual breadth and policy-specific expertise.
The MIA requires the successful completion of 54 graduate-level credits in residence at SIPA. All students must complete one policy concentration and may pursue an optional minor in a regional or thematic area.
Academic Structure
Students in the MIA program develop core competencies in policy analysis, economics, quantitative methods, leadership and management, and global affairs. The curriculum includes a required policy concentration (15 credits) and offers the opportunity to pursue an optional minor in a complementary field.
All MIA students must complete the following program-wide requirements:
- Global Requirement, ensuring exposure to international systems, institutions, and cross-border issues
- International Law, a required course providing foundational knowledge of legal principles governing international relations
- Capstone or Master’s Thesis: Students fulfill the culminating requirement by completing either a two-semester Capstone Workshop or Master’s Thesis
Curricular Tracks
To support varied academic preparation and professional goals, the MIA offers two curricular tracks:
MIA-Track I
Designed for students pursuing traditional international affairs fields with broad policy flexibility.
- Quantitative Analysis and Economics: 6 credits
- SIPA IA6350 – Economics for International and Public Affairs
- SIPA IA6500 – Quantitative Analysis I
- Leadership and Management: 4.5 credits
- Global Requirement: 6 credits
MIA-Track II
Designed for students in SIPA's quantitatively intensive concentrations, Data Science for Policy and International Finance and Economic Policy.
- Quantitative Analysis and Economics: 12 credits
- SIPA IA6400 and IA6401 – Micro and Macro Economics
- SIPA IA6500 and IA6501 – Quantitative Analysis I and II
- Leadership and Management: 1.5 credits
- Global Requirement: 3 credits
Note for Continuing Students:
Students who entered the MIA program before Fall 2025 should refer to the 2024–2025 Academic Bulletin Archive for curriculum details, degree requirements, and relevant policies that apply to their program of study.
Contact Us
Rumela Sen
Lecturer in the Discipline of International and Public Affairs
Faculty Director, Master of International Affairs
MIA-Track I Requirements
The MIA-Track I is designed for students pursuing traditional international affairs fields while maintaining broader flexibility across policy areas. Students in this track choose a concentration in one of the following areas: Climate, Energy, and Environment; Development and Governance; Human Rights, Gender, and Equity; International Security and Diplomacy; Technology Policy and Innovation; or Urban and Social Policy.
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following area requirements:
Policy Concentration (15 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete one of the following policy concentrations:
Politics and Policy (6 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following components:
- Politics I: Required foundational course.
- Politics II: One course selected from the approved list of options.
- Policy Skills I: Required foundational course.
- Policy Skills II: One course selected from the approved list of options.
MIA Politics I Core. This course introduces MIA students to foundational theories and analytical frameworks used to understand international affairs and the global political economy. Drawing on literature from international relations, comparative politics, political sociology, and economics, the course examines the evolution of international relations scholarship and key debates shaping the field.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course will provide students with a policy-oriented introduction to the American political economy.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This seven-week course introduces students to some of the central concepts, theories, and analytical tools used in contemporary social science to understand and explain world politics. The theoretical literature is drawn from different fields in the social sciences, including comparative politics, international relations, political sociology and economics.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the causes of democratic erosion and the emerging challenges posed by artificial intelligence and digital technologies. Students will explore foundational theories of democracy, analyze factors such as polarization and corruption, and assess how AI, misinformation, and digital surveillance shape democratic decline. Through case studies and group projects, the course also considers strategies to strengthen democratic institutions in an age of technological disruption.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. Global Politics & International Organizations introduces the actors, coalitions, institutions, and processes of global politics. It creates the conceptual foundations for understanding the role of international organizations in today’s multipolar and complex (or, ‘multiplex’) world.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the evolution of American foreign policy within the context of U.S. political institutions, domestic dynamics, and historical experiences. It emphasizes the interplay between foreign and domestic policy, considering how American identity, political culture, and internal debates have shaped international engagement. While grounded in key moments in U.S.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the development and dynamics of political parties in the United States, with a focus on the evolution of the two-party system and its influence on American politics and policymaking. Students will explore the historical foundations of party formation, ideological shifts over time, and the distinct roles parties play at national and subnational levels.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the unique challenges and opportunities of the Global South, integrating theoretical frameworks, historical analysis, and contemporary case studies to develop a thorough understanding of how the region confronts and navigates some of the most significant issues shaping its politics and policies.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course offers an introduction to foundational policy topics related to cyberspace, with a focus on how and why cyberspace matters for policymaking more broadly, especially in an international relations context. Over the past several decades, cyberspace has emerged as a critical, crosscutting policy arena, offering challenges and opportunities for practitioners beyond those solely focused on policymaking for cyberspace itself.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course explores the foundational principles of constitutional democracy in the United States, with a focus on the separation of powers and the evolving balance among the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches. Through close readings of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights, students will examine the revolutionary premise that sovereign power is delegated by the people and limited by design.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics Core II. Instructor: Peter Jaffe. This course explores how sudden disruptions—such as elections, economic shocks, natural disasters, and conflict—can challenge or derail long-term policy efforts. Using analytical tools from game theory, economics, management, and law, students will assess how policy responses are developed under pressure and how to design adaptive programs capable of withstanding unexpected change.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills I Core. This course provides students with practical skills to communicate clearly and persuasively on issues they care about. Whether writing to influence policy, shape public opinion, or present ideas within an organization, the ability to craft sharp, purposeful messages is essential. Students will learn to distill their key arguments, adapt their writing for different audiences, and develop strong foundational pieces such as op-eds, press releases, and policy memos.
Fall 2025
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Summer 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. Making good policy is a science, an art, and a craft. This course introduces students to the key principles of public policy design from global perspectives.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. Public policy, political systems, and organizations inevitably involve complex interactions between competing interests. For practitioners, it is crucial to understand how actions are met with responses, and predicting those responses is critical to designing successful strategies. Game theory is the formal mathematical toolkit for studying strategic interaction across the social sciences. This course provides a general introduction to the theory of games.
Fall 2025
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This introductory course equips students with the fundamentals of persuasive speechwriting and public speaking for political, business, and nonprofit contexts. Students will explore the classical canons of rhetoric and apply them to contemporary speechwriting, developing both the art and science of persuasion.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course builds on the writing and presentation skills developed in the first part of the SIPA Skills Course by exploring how these skills may be deployed in the broader context of organizational communications, with a focus on policy advocacy.
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to the practical and strategic tools used to influence public policy through advocacy, communications, and coalition-building. Reimagining the traditional think tank model, students will engage with real-world approaches to policy change by examining case studies, developing messaging strategies, mapping stakeholders, and selecting appropriate mobilization tactics.
Fall 2025
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course provides students with a foundation in the principles and practices of video journalism and multimedia narrative.
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course equips students with the journalistic tools necessary to communicate policy ideas to broad public audiences. Through a combination of seminar discussions and workshop-based learning, students develop fluency in multiple forms of opinion writing, including op-eds, essays, blogs, and newsletters. Weekly writing assignments guide students in translating specialized policy expertise into persuasive, accessible prose suitable for publication in student and professional media outlets.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. We will examine the evolution and revolution in data-driven politics as practiced by leading campaigns and advocacy efforts. The course will provide an overview of key issues in public opinion polling, large-scale microtargeting, randomized controlled trial testing, the application of behavioral science and modern statistical techniques, as well as the current and emerging uses of large language models. Our primary focus will be on developments in U.S.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. In recent years, despite enhanced awareness about the magnitude and multifaceted nature of gender inequalities on the one hand, and the promises of the ‘Data Revolution’ including AI on the other hand, gaps remain in both data availability and usage of 'Gender Data' that aim to both capture the underlying dynamics, drivers and outcomes of gender inequalities, and promote gender equality.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Alternate title: "How to Use a Bit of Code to Do Things That Would Be Really Hard in Spreadsheets." Students will learn data analysis through the Python programming language—exploring, manipulating, visualizing, and interpreting open data to answer policy questions. The class incorporates use of generative AI for coding problems, helping students understand its strengths and weaknesses. No coding experience required.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This course provides a practical introduction to the core concepts, techniques, and tools used to analyze data for effective decision-making.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This advanced course provides a comprehensive introduction to the principles and practices of effective database design, management, and security. Students will gain a strong foundation in information organization, data storage, and database administration, with attention to key topics such as data warehousing, governance, security, privacy, and alternative database models.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I (SIPA IA6500). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Research is an important part of the policy process: it can inform the development of programs and policies so they are responsive to community needs, reveal the impacts of these programs and policies, and help us better understand populations or social phenomena. This half-semester course serves as an introduction to how to ethically collect data for smaller research projects, with an in-depth look at focus groups and surveys as data collection tools.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This 7-week mini-course leads the students into the R world, helps them master the basics, and establishes a platform for future self-study. The course offers students basic programming knowledge and effective data analysis skills in R in the context of public policy-making and policy evaluation. Students will learn how to install R and RStudio, understand and use R data objects, and become familiar with base R and several statistical and graphing packages.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to foundational concepts and methods for analyzing text-as-data using Python. Designed for beginners with no prior coding experience, the course emphasizes hands-on learning and practical applications across disciplines. Students will explore computational techniques for collecting, cleaning, and analyzing text data from sources such as news media, social media, and websites. Topics include web scraping, working with APIs, sentiment analysis, topic modeling, named entity recognition, and more.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This course introduces students to the principles and practices of data visualization as a powerful tool for interpreting and communicating complex information. As large datasets become increasingly available across sectors, the ability to transform raw data into clear, compelling visuals is essential for insight and decision-making.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Computing in Context (DSPC IA6000). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence (AI), its applications in public policy, and its implications for the future of governance. Students will gain a foundational understanding of AI, including the mathematical and programming principles behind common machine learning algorithms used for prediction, classification, and clustering.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of Generative Artificial Intelligence (Generative AI), with a focus on how these technologies are built and their implications for society and public policy. Students will gain an understanding of language models, large language models (LLMs), deep learning, transformers, and Generative Pre-Trained Transformers (GPT).
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. In the past two years, Large Language Models (LLMs) built using transformer frameworks have emerged as the fastest-growing area of research and investment in AI/machine learning. Recent releases of chatbots such as ChatGPT (OpenAI), Bing (Microsoft), and Bard (Google) quickly reached hundreds of millions of users and have become the face of artificial intelligence for consumers.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I (SIPA IA6500). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Data is not neutral. How it is collected, categorized, and analyzed is shaped by historical, political, economic, and social forces, often reinforcing existing injustices. While policy professionals are trained in quantitative methods, there is comparatively less focus on interrogating how data itself is produced, how existing frameworks exclude certain populations, and how data can be used to either reinforce or challenge inequities.
Spring 2026
International Law (1.5 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following:
MIA International Law Core. This course introduces students to the foundational concepts and contemporary practice of public international law through real-world scenarios and current global developments. Each session blends structured legal instruction with scenario-based simulations, helping students connect abstract legal norms to strategic thinking, negotiation, and policy analysis. Designed for students without a legal background, the course emphasizes the practical relevance of international law to global governance, diplomacy, and transnational challenges.
Fall 2025
Global Requirement (6 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must fulfill a 6-credit Global Requirement, which may be met through coursework or non-credit experiences that reflect meaningful international engagement. The requirement can be satisfied in one of the following ways:
Coursework and Experience Requirements
- REGN and Interstate Relations coursework – Completion of 6 credits of SIPA Regional coursework relevant to the same region(s).
- International Internship & Coursework – Completion of an internship in a non-U.S. country, plus 3 credits of SIPA Regional (REGN) or Interstate Relations courses relevant to the same region.
- U.S.-Based Internship with Regional Focus – Completion of a U.S.-based internship with a strong regional focus, plus 3 credits of SIPA REGN or Interstate Relations courses relevant to the same region.
- Capstone, Thesis, & Coursework – Completion of a Traveling Capstone project or master’s thesis, plus 3 credits of a related REGN course.
- Language Study – Completion of 6 credits of Columbia University language instruction that count toward fulfilling the MIA language requirement. If the language requirement has already been met, an additional 6 CU instructional language credits at any level may be taken.
Global Requirement Waiver Requirements
- SIPA International Exchange Program – Completing a semester abroad at the American University of Cairo (AUC).
- Regional Minor – Completing a SIPA regional minor.
- GPPN Dual Degree – Completion of a full academic year at a partner institution.
- International Undergraduate Degree – Holding a completed undergraduate degree from a non-U.S. institution.
- International Work Experience – A minimum of one year of consecutive, full-time professional experience in a non-U.S. country.
Ethics in Public Policy (1.5 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following:
MIA & MPA Ethics Core. This course investigates how ethical considerations shape, complicate, and often introduce dilemmas into the work of policymaking. It asks what justice, democracy, and responsibility demand in concrete policy contexts—should political leaders prioritize stability or accountability in post-conflict settings? Should elected officials follow their moral convictions even when doing so goes against the preferences of their constituents? Should public servants uphold the law when it conflicts with their moral principles?
Fall 2025
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Summer 2026
Leadership and Management (4.5 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following components:
- Leadership and Management I: Required core course.
- Leadership and Management II: At least two different courses selected from the approved list of options, for a minimum of 3 credits total.
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management I Core. Leadership in Action integrates strategic leadership frameworks, real-world case studies, and an immersive multi-week simulation to build students’ capacity to lead in complex, high-stakes environments. Through a sequence of applied exercises, ranging from team formation and innovation design to crisis response, students will develop critical skills in decision-making, influence, and organizational change.
Fall 2025
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MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course examines leadership and innovative policy making through interdisciplinary analysis, reflective discussion, and applied case studies. Students will explore key themes such as the character and context of leadership, the role of institutions, the use of behavioral tools like “nudging,” and the dynamics of leadership during crises.
Fall 2025
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course explores key themes in people management and organizational culture, equipping students with skills to lead diverse teams and build resilient, high-performing workplaces. Through case studies, simulations, and applied exercises, students will examine talent strategy, performance management, inclusive leadership, and organizational design.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course introduces students to the field of public management, focusing on the tools and strategies managers use to influence organizational behavior and deliver public services. Through lectures, case studies, discussions, and group projects, students will explore management practices in government and in nonprofit and private organizations that partner with the public sector. The course draws on examples from New York City and U.S. agencies, as well as comparative cases from Asia, Latin America, and Europe.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course equips students with foundational concepts and skills to advance equitable, inclusive, and just approaches to public policy. Through self-reflection, critical analysis, and applied frameworks, students will examine how social identities, histories of power, and systemic inequalities shape policymaking in both domestic and international contexts. Topics include intersectionality, decolonization, systems change, and strategies for addressing discrimination and exclusion.
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course equips students with the skills, strategies, and resilience necessary to lead effectively during extreme events and complex crises.
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course blends crisis communication theory, case studies, and immersive simulations to prepare students for high-stakes communications challenges in the public and nonprofit sectors. Students will develop strategic judgment and tactical skills necessary to lead during crises while practicing rapid-response communication under pressure.
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course is an interactive, practice-focused experience designed to equip students with skills and confidence in negotiation and persuasion across public and private sector contexts. Drawing on negotiation psychology, best practices, and evidence-based approaches, the course will develop students’ ability to navigate complex interpersonal and multilateral dynamics.
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course trains students to become effective spokespersons and communications directors in any sector—government, nonprofit, or private enterprise. The class focuses on developing practical skills and insight into the extensive role of communications in achieving organizational goals.
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course explores how core functional areas, such as governance, finance, talent strategy, communications, and accountability, interconnect to support a nonprofit organization’s mission and strategic goals. Students will examine key management practices in nonprofit settings, emphasizing mission alignment, ethical fundraising, board effectiveness, and impact measurement.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course introduces students to the field of behavioral economics and the study of individual decision-making. Students will examine how behavior often departs from standard rational models and consider the implications for public policy and management. The course begins with the economic concept of rationality, then proceeds to evidence on systematic deviations, including impatience, framing, reference dependence, and social preferences.
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course builds on core leadership concepts by focusing on startup strategy, entrepreneurial execution, and organizational leadership in uncertain environments. Through case studies and practitioner insights, students will apply Lean Startup methodologies, explore the ethical and cultural dimensions of entrepreneurial leadership, and assess the impact of generative AI on innovation.
Fall 2025
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. Sustainability management matters because we only have one planet, and we must learn how to manage our organizations in a way that ensures that our planet is maintained. The course is designed to introduce you to the field of sustainability management. This is not an academic course that reviews the literature of the field and discusses how scholars think about the management of organizations that are environmentally sound.
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This course develops students’ capacity to lead effectively in moments of adversity and opportunity by building systems intelligence and deepening awareness of group dynamics. Through student-led leadership cases, structured exercises, readings, and role-plays, the course fosters diagnostic skills for understanding authority, group behavior, and organizational complexity.
Fall 2025
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management II Core. This experiential course focuses on the self-management and interpersonal skills essential for effective leadership in high-pressure, high-stakes situations. Through role-plays, structured exercises, video analysis, and Leadership Labs, students will develop greater self-awareness, communication agility, and emotional resilience. Emphasizing the analysis of leadership failure as a learning tool, the course uses individual student cases to explore how personal patterns and behaviors impact leadership effectiveness.
Spring 2026
MPA Financial Management I Core. This course provides a practical introduction to budgeting as a critical tool for planning, decision-making, and leadership across the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. Students will develop hands-on skills in budget creation, financial analysis, and cash flow management while exploring how budgets shape organizational strategy and operations.
Fall 2025
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Economics (3 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following:
MIA Economics Core. This course provides a thorough introduction to the principles of microeconomics and macroeconomics, equipping students with the analytical tools to understand how individuals, firms, and governments make decisions and how they interact in local and global markets. By combining theory with applied learning, the course builds a foundation for critical thinking about real-world economic challenges and policy-making in an increasingly interconnected world.
Fall 2025
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Quantitative Analysis (3 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete the following:
MIA & MPA Quantitative I Core. This course introduces the fundamentals of statistical analysis, with applications in public policy, management, and the social sciences. Students will begin with basic techniques for describing and summarizing data and progress toward more advanced methods for inference and prediction. The course emphasizes practical tools for interpreting quantitative data and drawing evidence-based conclusions about the social world.
Fall 2025
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Capstone Workshop or Master's Thesis (4.5 credits)
All Master of International Affairs (MIA) students in Track I must complete either a Capstone Workshop or a Master’s Thesis as their culminating academic requirement. Both options are structured as two-semester sequences totaling 4.5 credits (1.5 credits in the fall and 3.0 credits in the spring) and are designed to synthesize the skills and knowledge gained throughout the MIA program.
The Capstone Workshop pairs teams of 6–8 students with an external client to address a defined policy challenge. Guided by a faculty advisor, students deliver professional-quality analysis and actionable recommendations, gaining hands-on experience with real-world policy problems.
The Master’s Thesis provides an opportunity for students to pursue individualized research on a significant international policy issue. Working closely with a faculty advisor, students develop a 30-page policy thesis that incorporates original research, analytical rigor, and a clear policy argument. This option is well-suited for students preparing for research-intensive careers or further academic study.
All MIA-Track I students must complete one of the following sequences:
The Capstone Consultancy Project Management course is the first of a two-course sequence. The second course is the Capstone Workshop (SIPA IA9000).
Prerequisite: Course Application. A Capstone Workshop is a live consulting project with an external client outside of SIPA. Each workshop partners a team of about 6 graduate students with a faculty advisor. The goal is to provide clients with innovative analysis and practical recommendations while SIPA students gain experience by working on a real-world problem. A core requirement for the Master of International Affairs (MIA), Master of Public Administration (MPA), the workshops give students an opportunity to put learning into practice.
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Available only to Master of International Affairs students. The Thesis program is a rigorous, two-semester sequence that enables a select group of students to produce a substantive, publishable piece of original research or policy analysis. Designed for those seeking to strengthen their analytical, methodological, and writing skills, the program culminates in a thesis of at least 35 pages that may take the form of an academic journal article, a policy essay for a broader audience, or a research report suitable for a think tank.
Fall 2025
Available only to Master of International Affairs students. The Thesis program is a rigorous, two-semester sequence that enables a select group of students to produce a substantive, publishable piece of original research or policy analysis. Designed for those seeking to strengthen their analytical, methodological, and writing skills, the program culminates in a thesis of at least 35 pages that may take the form of an academic journal article, a policy essay for a broader audience, or a research report suitable for a think tank.
Elective Courses or Optional Minor (9 credits)
All MIA-Track I students must complete an additional 9 credits of coursework to meet the 54-credit graduation requirement. Students may choose to use these elective credits to complete a minor.
Foreign Language Proficiency (Required without academic credit)
Proficiency in a language other than English is a graduation requirement for students pursuing a Master of International Affairs degree. Proficiency is defined as the ability to read, write, and speak the language at the Intermediate II level. This requirement is met in one of three ways:
- As a native speaker of a language other than English who also demonstrates that a substantive part of their education (e.g., high school, college, prior graduate degree) has been in that language. TOEFL/IELTS will also be considered as supplemental evidence of proficiency in another language.
- By passing a language proficiency exam through a Columbia language department. The exam can only be taken once. You are advised to take the exam in your first year of study.
- By achieving a grade of B or better in an Intermediate Level II (4th semester) language course at Columbia. Students may register for any language course at Columbia. However, Elementary-level courses cannot count toward the 54 credits applicable to the degree. Intermediate-level courses will count as electives. If you are at the elementary level, it is recommended that you begin your language courses in your first semester.
Internship Experience (Required without academic credit)
All MIA-Track I students must complete an internship. SIPA’s Career Advancement Center administers the internship process. Questions about the internship requirement or internship process may be directed to [email protected].
Professional Development (Required without academic credit)
All MIA-Track I students must complete a professional development requirement. SIPA’s Career Advancement Center administers the professional development workshops required of all students. Questions about the professional development requirement or workshops may be directed to [email protected].
MIA-Track II Requirements
The MIA-Track II is designed for advanced quantitative study for students who concentrate in either International Finance and Economic Policy or Data Science for Policy. This track emphasizes rigorous technical and analytical training to prepare students for specialized careers in these fields.
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following area requirements:
Policy Concentration (15 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete one of the following policy concentrations:
Politics and Policy (6 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following components:
- Politics I: Required foundational course.
- Politics II: One course selected from the approved list of options.
- Policy Skills I: Required foundational course.
- Policy Skills II: One course selected from the approved list of options.
MIA Politics I Core. This course introduces MIA students to foundational theories and analytical frameworks used to understand international affairs and the global political economy. Drawing on literature from international relations, comparative politics, political sociology, and economics, the course examines the evolution of international relations scholarship and key debates shaping the field.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course will provide students with a policy-oriented introduction to the American political economy.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This seven-week course introduces students to some of the central concepts, theories, and analytical tools used in contemporary social science to understand and explain world politics. The theoretical literature is drawn from different fields in the social sciences, including comparative politics, international relations, political sociology and economics.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the causes of democratic erosion and the emerging challenges posed by artificial intelligence and digital technologies. Students will explore foundational theories of democracy, analyze factors such as polarization and corruption, and assess how AI, misinformation, and digital surveillance shape democratic decline. Through case studies and group projects, the course also considers strategies to strengthen democratic institutions in an age of technological disruption.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. Global Politics & International Organizations introduces the actors, coalitions, institutions, and processes of global politics. It creates the conceptual foundations for understanding the role of international organizations in today’s multipolar and complex (or, ‘multiplex’) world.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the evolution of American foreign policy within the context of U.S. political institutions, domestic dynamics, and historical experiences. It emphasizes the interplay between foreign and domestic policy, considering how American identity, political culture, and internal debates have shaped international engagement. While grounded in key moments in U.S.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the development and dynamics of political parties in the United States, with a focus on the evolution of the two-party system and its influence on American politics and policymaking. Students will explore the historical foundations of party formation, ideological shifts over time, and the distinct roles parties play at national and subnational levels.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course examines the unique challenges and opportunities of the Global South, integrating theoretical frameworks, historical analysis, and contemporary case studies to develop a thorough understanding of how the region confronts and navigates some of the most significant issues shaping its politics and policies.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course offers an introduction to foundational policy topics related to cyberspace, with a focus on how and why cyberspace matters for policymaking more broadly, especially in an international relations context. Over the past several decades, cyberspace has emerged as a critical, crosscutting policy arena, offering challenges and opportunities for practitioners beyond those solely focused on policymaking for cyberspace itself.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics II Core. This course explores the foundational principles of constitutional democracy in the United States, with a focus on the separation of powers and the evolving balance among the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches. Through close readings of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights, students will examine the revolutionary premise that sovereign power is delegated by the people and limited by design.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Politics Core II. Instructor: Peter Jaffe. This course explores how sudden disruptions—such as elections, economic shocks, natural disasters, and conflict—can challenge or derail long-term policy efforts. Using analytical tools from game theory, economics, management, and law, students will assess how policy responses are developed under pressure and how to design adaptive programs capable of withstanding unexpected change.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills I Core. This course provides students with practical skills to communicate clearly and persuasively on issues they care about. Whether writing to influence policy, shape public opinion, or present ideas within an organization, the ability to craft sharp, purposeful messages is essential. Students will learn to distill their key arguments, adapt their writing for different audiences, and develop strong foundational pieces such as op-eds, press releases, and policy memos.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. Making good policy is a science, an art, and a craft. This course introduces students to the key principles of public policy design from global perspectives.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. Public policy, political systems, and organizations inevitably involve complex interactions between competing interests. For practitioners, it is crucial to understand how actions are met with responses, and predicting those responses is critical to designing successful strategies. Game theory is the formal mathematical toolkit for studying strategic interaction across the social sciences. This course provides a general introduction to the theory of games.
Fall 2025
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This introductory course equips students with the fundamentals of persuasive speechwriting and public speaking for political, business, and nonprofit contexts. Students will explore the classical canons of rhetoric and apply them to contemporary speechwriting, developing both the art and science of persuasion.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course builds on the writing and presentation skills developed in the first part of the SIPA Skills Course by exploring how these skills may be deployed in the broader context of organizational communications, with a focus on policy advocacy.
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to the practical and strategic tools used to influence public policy through advocacy, communications, and coalition-building. Reimagining the traditional think tank model, students will engage with real-world approaches to policy change by examining case studies, developing messaging strategies, mapping stakeholders, and selecting appropriate mobilization tactics.
Fall 2025
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course provides students with a foundation in the principles and practices of video journalism and multimedia narrative.
Spring 2026
MIA Policy Skills II Core. This course equips students with the journalistic tools necessary to communicate policy ideas to broad public audiences. Through a combination of seminar discussions and workshop-based learning, students develop fluency in multiple forms of opinion writing, including op-eds, essays, blogs, and newsletters. Weekly writing assignments guide students in translating specialized policy expertise into persuasive, accessible prose suitable for publication in student and professional media outlets.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. We will examine the evolution and revolution in data-driven politics as practiced by leading campaigns and advocacy efforts. The course will provide an overview of key issues in public opinion polling, large-scale microtargeting, randomized controlled trial testing, the application of behavioral science and modern statistical techniques, as well as the current and emerging uses of large language models. Our primary focus will be on developments in U.S.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. In recent years, despite enhanced awareness about the magnitude and multifaceted nature of gender inequalities on the one hand, and the promises of the ‘Data Revolution’ including AI on the other hand, gaps remain in both data availability and usage of 'Gender Data' that aim to both capture the underlying dynamics, drivers and outcomes of gender inequalities, and promote gender equality.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Alternate title: "How to Use a Bit of Code to Do Things That Would Be Really Hard in Spreadsheets." Students will learn data analysis through the Python programming language—exploring, manipulating, visualizing, and interpreting open data to answer policy questions. The class incorporates use of generative AI for coding problems, helping students understand its strengths and weaknesses. No coding experience required.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This advanced course provides a comprehensive introduction to the principles and practices of effective database design, management, and security. Students will gain a strong foundation in information organization, data storage, and database administration, with attention to key topics such as data warehousing, governance, security, privacy, and alternative database models.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I (SIPA IA6500). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Research is an important part of the policy process: it can inform the development of programs and policies so they are responsive to community needs, reveal the impacts of these programs and policies, and help us better understand populations or social phenomena. This half-semester course serves as an introduction to how to ethically collect data for smaller research projects, with an in-depth look at focus groups and surveys as data collection tools.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This 7-week mini-course leads the students into the R world, helps them master the basics, and establishes a platform for future self-study. The course offers students basic programming knowledge and effective data analysis skills in R in the context of public policy-making and policy evaluation. Students will learn how to install R and RStudio, understand and use R data objects, and become familiar with base R and several statistical and graphing packages.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to foundational concepts and methods for analyzing text-as-data using Python. Designed for beginners with no prior coding experience, the course emphasizes hands-on learning and practical applications across disciplines. Students will explore computational techniques for collecting, cleaning, and analyzing text data from sources such as news media, social media, and websites. Topics include web scraping, working with APIs, sentiment analysis, topic modeling, named entity recognition, and more.
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This course introduces students to the principles and practices of data visualization as a powerful tool for interpreting and communicating complex information. As large datasets become increasingly available across sectors, the ability to transform raw data into clear, compelling visuals is essential for insight and decision-making.
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Computing in Context (DSPC IA6000). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence (AI), its applications in public policy, and its implications for the future of governance. Students will gain a foundational understanding of AI, including the mathematical and programming principles behind common machine learning algorithms used for prediction, classification, and clustering.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of Generative Artificial Intelligence (Generative AI), with a focus on how these technologies are built and their implications for society and public policy. Students will gain an understanding of language models, large language models (LLMs), deep learning, transformers, and Generative Pre-Trained Transformers (GPT).
Fall 2025
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. In the past two years, Large Language Models (LLMs) built using transformer frameworks have emerged as the fastest-growing area of research and investment in AI/machine learning. Recent releases of chatbots such as ChatGPT (OpenAI), Bing (Microsoft), and Bard (Google) quickly reached hundreds of millions of users and have become the face of artificial intelligence for consumers.
Spring 2026
MIA and MPA Policy Skills II Core. Pre-req: Quant I (SIPA IA6500). Priority Registration: MIA and MPA. Data is not neutral. How it is collected, categorized, and analyzed is shaped by historical, political, economic, and social forces, often reinforcing existing injustices. While policy professionals are trained in quantitative methods, there is comparatively less focus on interrogating how data itself is produced, how existing frameworks exclude certain populations, and how data can be used to either reinforce or challenge inequities.
Spring 2026
International Law (1.5 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following:
MIA International Law Core. This course introduces students to the foundational concepts and contemporary practice of public international law through real-world scenarios and current global developments. Each session blends structured legal instruction with scenario-based simulations, helping students connect abstract legal norms to strategic thinking, negotiation, and policy analysis. Designed for students without a legal background, the course emphasizes the practical relevance of international law to global governance, diplomacy, and transnational challenges.
Fall 2025
Global Requirement (3 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must fulfill a 3-credit Global Requirement, which may be met through coursework or non-credit experiences that reflect meaningful international engagement. The requirement can be satisfied in one of the following ways:
Coursework and Experience Requirements
- REGN and Interstate Relations coursework – Completion of 3 credits of SIPA Regional coursework relevant to the same region(s).
- Language Study – Completion of 3 credits of Columbia University language instruction that count toward fulfilling the MIA language requirement. If the language requirement has already been met, an additional 6 CU instructional language credits at any level may be taken.
Global Requirement Waiver Requirements
- SIPA International Exchange Program – Completing a semester abroad at the American University of Cairo (AUC).
- Regional Minor – Completing a SIPA regional minor.
- GPPN Dual Degree – Completion of a full academic year at a partner institution.
- International Undergraduate Degree – Holding a completed undergraduate degree from a non-U.S. institution.
- International Work Experience – A minimum of one year of consecutive, full-time professional experience in a non-U.S. country.
Ethics in Public Policy (1.5 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following:
MIA & MPA Ethics Core. This course investigates how ethical considerations shape, complicate, and often introduce dilemmas into the work of policymaking. It asks what justice, democracy, and responsibility demand in concrete policy contexts—should political leaders prioritize stability or accountability in post-conflict settings? Should elected officials follow their moral convictions even when doing so goes against the preferences of their constituents? Should public servants uphold the law when it conflicts with their moral principles?
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
Leadership and Management (1.5 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following:
MIA & MPA Leadership and Management I Core. Leadership in Action integrates strategic leadership frameworks, real-world case studies, and an immersive multi-week simulation to build students’ capacity to lead in complex, high-stakes environments. Through a sequence of applied exercises, ranging from team formation and innovation design to crisis response, students will develop critical skills in decision-making, influence, and organizational change.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
Economics (6 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following two courses:
MPA and MIA-Track II Economics Core. This course introduces the fundamental tools of microeconomic analysis used to understand individual decision-making, market behavior, and policy outcomes. It equips students with the analytical frameworks and terminology of the economics profession, fostering both critical and open-minded engagement with economic issues. Emphasis is placed on the motivations and consequences of microeconomic policies in international and public affairs contexts.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
MPA and MIA-Track II Economics Core. This course continues the one-year sequence initiated with SIPA IA6400 and focuses on macroeconomics. The goal of this course is to provide students with the analytical framework to examine and interpret observed economic events in the global economy. The causal relationships between macroeconomic aggregates is based upon microeconomic principles. The subject matter always refers to concrete situations with a particular focus on the causes and effects of the current global financial crisis.
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
Quantitative Analysis (6 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete the following two courses:
MIA & MPA Quantitative I Core. This course introduces the fundamentals of statistical analysis, with applications in public policy, management, and the social sciences. Students will begin with basic techniques for describing and summarizing data and progress toward more advanced methods for inference and prediction. The course emphasizes practical tools for interpreting quantitative data and drawing evidence-based conclusions about the social world.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
MPA Quantitative II Core. This course introduces regression analysis as a key tool for policy analysis and program evaluation. Emphasizing causal inference, students will learn to assess the impacts of programs and policies using both experimental and non-experimental methods. The first half of the course reviews foundational concepts from Quant I and builds toward multiple regression techniques; the second half applies those tools to real-world policy settings.
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Fall 2025
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Summer 2026
Capstone Workshop or Master's Thesis (4.5 credits)
All Master of International Affairs (MIA) students in Track II must complete either a Capstone Workshop or a Master’s Thesis as their culminating academic requirement. Both options are structured as two-semester sequences totaling 4.5 credits (1.5 credits in the fall and 3.0 credits in the spring) and are designed to synthesize the skills and knowledge gained throughout the MIA program.
The Capstone Workshop pairs teams of 6–8 students with an external client to address a defined policy challenge. Guided by a faculty advisor, students deliver professional-quality analysis and actionable recommendations, gaining hands-on experience with real-world policy problems.
The Master’s Thesis provides an opportunity for students to pursue individualized research on a significant international policy issue. Working closely with a faculty advisor, students develop a 30-page policy thesis that incorporates original research, analytical rigor, and a clear policy argument. This option is well-suited for students preparing for research-intensive careers or further academic study.
All MIA-Track II students must complete one of the following sequences:
The Capstone Consultancy Project Management course is the first of a two-course sequence. The second course is the Capstone Workshop (SIPA IA9000).
Prerequisite: Course Application. A Capstone Workshop is a live consulting project with an external client outside of SIPA. Each workshop partners a team of about 6 graduate students with a faculty advisor. The goal is to provide clients with innovative analysis and practical recommendations while SIPA students gain experience by working on a real-world problem. A core requirement for the Master of International Affairs (MIA), Master of Public Administration (MPA), the workshops give students an opportunity to put learning into practice.
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
Available only to Master of International Affairs students. The Thesis program is a rigorous, two-semester sequence that enables a select group of students to produce a substantive, publishable piece of original research or policy analysis. Designed for those seeking to strengthen their analytical, methodological, and writing skills, the program culminates in a thesis of at least 35 pages that may take the form of an academic journal article, a policy essay for a broader audience, or a research report suitable for a think tank.
Fall 2025
Available only to Master of International Affairs students. The Thesis program is a rigorous, two-semester sequence that enables a select group of students to produce a substantive, publishable piece of original research or policy analysis. Designed for those seeking to strengthen their analytical, methodological, and writing skills, the program culminates in a thesis of at least 35 pages that may take the form of an academic journal article, a policy essay for a broader audience, or a research report suitable for a think tank.
Elective Courses or Optional Minor (9 credits)
All MIA-Track II students must complete an additional 9 credits of coursework to meet the 54-credit graduation requirement. Students may choose to use these elective credits to complete a minor.
Foreign Language Proficiency (Required without academic credit)
Proficiency in a language other than English is a graduation requirement for students pursuing a Master of International Affairs degree. Proficiency is defined as the ability to read, write, and speak the language at the Intermediate II level. This requirement is met in one of three ways:
- As a native speaker of a language other than English who also demonstrates that a substantive part of their education (e.g., high school, college, prior graduate degree) has been in that language. TOEFL/IELTS will also be considered as supplemental evidence of proficiency in another language.
- By passing a language proficiency exam through a Columbia language department. The exam can only be taken once. You are advised to take the exam in your first year of study.
- By achieving a grade of B or better in an Intermediate Level II (4th semester) language course at Columbia. Students may register for any language course at Columbia. However, Elementary-level courses cannot count toward the 54 credits applicable to the degree. Intermediate-level courses will count as electives. If you are at the elementary level, it is recommended that you begin your language courses in your first semester.
Internship (Required without academic credit)
All MIA-Track II students must complete an internship. SIPA’s Career Advancement Center administers the internship process. Questions about the internship requirement or internship process may be directed to [email protected].
Professional Development (Required without academic credit)
All MIA-Track II students must complete a professional development requirement. SIPA’s Career Advancement Center administers the professional development workshops required of all students. Questions about the professional development requirement or workshops may be directed to [email protected].
Regional Minors
Regional knowledge is essential to understanding and addressing today’s global challenges. SIPA’s Regional Minors equip students with the analytical tools needed to examine international affairs through a regional lens. These minors complement the School’s global curriculum by providing in-depth engagement with a specific part of the world, allowing students to ground their policy training in historical, political, economic, and cultural context.
By combining rigorous policy training with regional and linguistic expertise, SIPA’s MIA students are well prepared to navigate complex international environments and lead with impact across sectors and borders.
To complete a Regional Minor, students complete 9 credits in one geographical area, from the following lists of approved. Students may also complete a Regional Foreign Language minor. To complete the Foreign Language minor, you must complete two intermediate or above foreign language courses plus one course in the region from the approved list below. Note that courses taken for a Pass/Fail grade cannot count toward the minor.
Africa
Finance, Policy, and Investments in Sub-Saharan Africa examines the interaction between public policy, financial systems, and private investment across selected countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The course focuses on how governments, financial institutions, and investors design and implement policies, financial products, and investment strategies to address development challenges and unlock economic opportunities.
Spring 2026
East Asia and Southeast Asia
No business and no government can ignore China. The People's Republic of China is the world's second-largest economy and is on track to surpass the US economyin the future. China represents enormous opportunities for businesses and public policies, but it also presents a set of tough challenges. This course is designed to provide a framework for understanding these issues. As several other emerging market economies hope to follow China's footsteps, the conceptual framework in the course should help one appreciate the risks and rewards in these economies better as well.
This course examines the foreign policy of the People’s Republic of China from 1949 to the present, analyzing the political, strategic, and economic drivers of Beijing’s engagement with the world. Topics include China’s relations with the United States, Russia, Asia, and the Global South; key historical turning points such as the Cold War, reform era, and post-Tiananmen period; and contemporary challenges including cross-Strait relations, great power competition, and global governance.
Spring 2026
Spring 2026
This course is designed to introduce students to issues of gender and development in Southeast Asia in comparative context. Development debates are currently in flux with important implications for the practice and analysis of gender and development. Some argue for market-driven, neo-liberal solutions to gender equality, while others believe that equitable gender relations will only come when women (and men) are empowered to understand their predicaments and work together to find local solutions to improve their lives.
Fall 2025
This course surveys the politics and history of the five countries of contemporary Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan). In addition to imparting a substantive understanding of these countries, the course explores several conceptual lenses through which the region can be analyzed both over time and in comparison with other parts of the world. The first half of the course examines the political history of the region, with particular reference to how policies and practices of the Soviet state shaped the former republics of Soviet Central Asia.
Fall 2025
Fall 2026
This seminar offers an in-depth, interdisciplinary examination of North Korea’s political system, society, foreign policy, and security strategy. Students will critically assess how outside powers influenced Korea’s division, the internal dynamics that shaped the Kim regime’s rise, and how state institutions continue to evolve.
Spring 2026
When asking a Chinese citizen about a particularly puzzling aspect of China’s economy, the response will sometimes be “ 这是中国特色的“ or this is the Chinese way of doing things. In this course, we will think deeply about what exactly that means in terms of how China’s macro-economy and financial system operates and what are the policy implications for those differences. This course has three distinguishing characteristics: i. It uses modern tools from macroeconomics and finance to analyze the Chinese economy; ii.
Fall 2025
Economic statecraft, or the use of economic policy instruments in attempts at influence, has become increasingly germane to international diplomacy and security. China has developed from a target of economic statecraft, as seen in sanctions on China after the Tiananmen crackdown in 1989, to an active user of economic statecraft. This course traces that shift, including China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, increasing participation in multilateral sanctions on other states, and accelerated trade and investments with all regions of the world.
Fall 2025
This seminar explores China’s rise and its implications for global governance. The course introduces core international relations concepts and theoretical debates, then examines China’s behavior in areas such as trade, development finance, human protection, maritime disputes, nuclear policy, and technology. The final weeks focus on national strategy debates in the United States and China. Students will engage in critical reading, policy writing, and seminar discussion.
Spring 2026
This graduate seminar course provides an overview of modern and contemporary Japanese foreign policy and the strategy behind its engagement with the world. It examines the following questions: What are the key determinants of Japanese foreign policy, and how have they evolved over time?
This course surveys key features of the Japanese political system, with a focus on political institutions and agents. The major actors create the structure for the course: the prime minister, the Diet, political parties, the bureaucracy, non-government actors such as big business and the media, and so on (see the class schedule below). Cutting across this course structure, we will examine key issues such as social and demographic change, political reform, administrative reform, foreign policy, national security, fiscal policy, energy, and others of particular interest to students.
Spring 2026
This intensive two-day workshop examines North Korea’s nuclear program within the broader security dynamics of the Indo-Pacific region. Students will explore how North Korea’s ambitions intersect with U.S.-China strategic competition and the evolving roles of Japan, South Korea, India, and other regional actors. Topics include extended deterrence, crisis escalation, alliance management, economic statecraft, and the linkage between Korean Peninsula security and Taiwan Strait tensions.
Europe
This seminar critically examines the evolution and current trajectory of Russian security policy, with particular attention to the ongoing war in Ukraine and its broad strategic implications. The course explores the political, historical, and structural factors that shape Russia’s national security outlook, as well as its use of military force, energy policy, diplomacy, and information operations to advance its interests.
Fall 2025
This course explores the process of EU policy-making - how and why certain public policies are pursued by the institutions of the European Union - and analyses what the Union is doing to address a number of major policy challenges in today's interdependent world.
Fall 2025
Instructor: Michael Broening. This seminar provides a bird’s eye view of Europe's political economy in the "poly-crisis" of overlapping global challenges ranging from the climate crisis and geopolitical tensions to migration and authoritarianism. Students will analyze patterns, responses, and repercussions of these challenges, with a critical focus on overcoming existing economic policy dilemmas.
Spring 2026
The European Union (EU) has a deep and broad commitment to the respect and promotion of human rights, both in its internal and its external policies. However, it often faces difficulties in living up to this commitment. In this course we will study the EU’s commitment to human rights as outlined in its founding Treaties, the role of its institutional actors in following up on this commitment, and the EU’s internal and external actions and policies in this respect. For the EU’s internal policies we will focus in particular on its non-discrimination policies as well as its migration policy.
Spring 2026
This course introduces students to the practice of modern diplomacy through case studies of global and regional crises and the European Union’s responses to them. Students will examine how foreign policy is developed and implemented from the perspective of a professional diplomat.
Spring 2026
A short course on selected issues in current US-EU economic relations. Topics covered include: US-EU trade relations; US-EU differences in relations with China; climate policy and trade; the digital economy and data privacy; European competition policy toward U.S. high tech firms; dollar-euro diplomacy and the international roles of the dollar and euro; the economic dimension to transatlantic security after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Spring 2026
This course provides an advanced introduction to the politics of the European Union and its member states. It explores the EU as a distinctive political entity shaped by both supranational and domestic political dynamics.
Spring 2026
In Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, and other countries of the Eurasia region, corruption is systemic. Corruption, defined as the abuse of public trust and power for private gain, is institutionalized in government at the national, regional, and local levels. Formal government decision-making processes have been captured by informal networks of political and business elites who exert significant control over the allocation of public resources.
Fall 2025
This Human Rights practicum course focuses on the Western Balkans of the Former Yugoslavia in a contemporary context. The course focuses on war crimes and their respective consequences that have occurred during the most recent Balkan Wars 1991-1999 in the Former Yugoslav states and will include a detailed review and examination of human rights policies and practices carried out by international, regional and national bodies, laws, organizations, frameworks of transitional justice and evaluative tools employed in an effort to stabilize a post-war, post-Communist, post-conflict scenario.
Fall 2025
Prerequisite: Instructor-Managed Waitlist. Propaganda, Russia and the World Information War is a highly current guide to propaganda and disinformation, the geopolitical impact of information, and how false, weaponized narratives threaten the world's news and information environment.
Fall 2025
Fall 2026
Pre-req: ISDI IA6000 (INAF U6874) - Foundations of Int'l Security Policy. This intensive two-day workshop explores the complex landscape of peacemaking and reconstruction in Ukraine following Russia’s 2022 invasion. Students will examine key challenges associated with ending hostilities, sustaining peace, and rebuilding the state. Topics include Ukraine’s security needs, Russia’s incentives and deterrents, frameworks for international monitoring and verification, economic reconstruction, human reintegration, and the risk of future aggression.
Fall 2025
Latin America
This course aims at familiarizing students with historical and contemporary debates on Latin American economic development and its social effects. The focus of the course is comparative in perspective. Most of the readings deal, therefore, with Latin America as a region, not with individual countries.
Spring 2026
The course provides students with a theoretical and empirical overview of the policies designed to address poverty and inequality in the developing world, as well as the political context in which these policies are chosen and implemented, with a particular (though not exclusive) focus on the Brazilian experience. The first meetings focus on normative perspectives and the general political implications of poverty and inequality. We then briefly examine differences in social policies between developed and developing countries and proceed to discuss various practical approaches to the issue.
Spring 2026
Middle East
This course seeks to help students learn how to think, not what to think – we pursue fuller thinking by drawing on the broadest range of evidence from right and left, Arab, Israeli and Palestinian, Jewish and Muslim, and others. No questions are banned: all perspectives are open to challenge. What tools are required to engage, understand and be involved with improving the Israeli-Palestinian issue by acquiring greater intelligence, nuance, and awareness of the claims and sensitivities of both sides?
Effective negotiation in the Middle East begins not with idealism or righteous vs evil, but with a clear-eyed understanding of stability, leverage, risk, and the interests that define each side’s bottom line. This short course explores the practice of real-world negotiation through the lens of two recent Israeli-Lebanese agreements, the 2022 maritime boundary accord and the subsequent ceasefire negotiations that ended the Lebanon front of the post-October 7 war.
Spring 2026
A strategic surprise can be defined as a seemingly abrupt change during warfare or bilateral relations that is unexpected in timing, location, and scope. Traditionally, this term has been applied within the framework of decision-making and policy formulation during conflicts. However, a broader perspective sees strategic surprises not only as sudden attacks that fundamentally alter the conflict landscape but also as political developments that lead to dramatic paradigm shifts – such as the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 or the end of the apartheid regime in South Africa.
Spring 2026
This immersive, two-day workshop examines the concept of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the lens of historic negotiation efforts, most notably the Camp David Summit (1999–2001). Guided by former Israeli and Palestinian negotiators, students will explore the political, legal, and narrative frameworks that have shaped these peace talks, with particular attention to the components of Palestinian statehood.
Fall 2025
Henry Kissinger remarked in the 1970s that "Israel has no foreign policy, only domestic politics." Moshe Dayan, Israel's quintessential general, observed that "Israel has no foreign policy, only a defense policy with international implications." These statements highlight an enduring question for the Middle East: What explains Israeli foreign policy? How do history, security challenges, ideology, and domestic politics influence Israel's position in a globalized world? This question carries special relevance when considering the war in Gaza.
Russia, Eurasia, and East Central Europe
Despite growing pressure to decarbonize, oil and natural gas continue to shape global power and politics. This course examines how energy markets drive foreign policy, economic security, and international conflict. Students will explore the central role of oil and gas in geopolitical relations, from OPEC+ and the petrodollar to the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Fall 2025
This seminar critically examines the evolution and current trajectory of Russian security policy, with particular attention to the ongoing war in Ukraine and its broad strategic implications. The course explores the political, historical, and structural factors that shape Russia’s national security outlook, as well as its use of military force, energy policy, diplomacy, and information operations to advance its interests.
Fall 2025
Pre-req: ISDI IA6000 (INAF U6874) - Foundations of Int'l Security Policy. This intensive two-day workshop explores the complex landscape of peacemaking and reconstruction in Ukraine following Russia’s 2022 invasion. Students will examine key challenges associated with ending hostilities, sustaining peace, and rebuilding the state. Topics include Ukraine’s security needs, Russia’s incentives and deterrents, frameworks for international monitoring and verification, economic reconstruction, human reintegration, and the risk of future aggression.
Fall 2025
This course is designed to help MA-level students improve their researching and writing skills, and become adept at distilling acquired knowledge into straightforward prose. The aim is to assist students in being more effective communicators regardless of whether they pursue careers in academia, journalism, government service, private enterprise or the non-governmental sector. The course will also promote better understanding of how to get work published by mass media outlets.
Fall 2025
Fall 2026
In Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, and other countries of the Eurasia region, corruption is systemic. Corruption, defined as the abuse of public trust and power for private gain, is institutionalized in government at the national, regional, and local levels. Formal government decision-making processes have been captured by informal networks of political and business elites who exert significant control over the allocation of public resources.
Fall 2025
This Human Rights practicum course focuses on the Western Balkans of the Former Yugoslavia in a contemporary context. The course focuses on war crimes and their respective consequences that have occurred during the most recent Balkan Wars 1991-1999 in the Former Yugoslav states and will include a detailed review and examination of human rights policies and practices carried out by international, regional and national bodies, laws, organizations, frameworks of transitional justice and evaluative tools employed in an effort to stabilize a post-war, post-Communist, post-conflict scenario.
Fall 2025
This course surveys the politics and history of the five countries of contemporary Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan). In addition to imparting a substantive understanding of these countries, the course explores several conceptual lenses through which the region can be analyzed both over time and in comparison with other parts of the world. The first half of the course examines the political history of the region, with particular reference to how policies and practices of the Soviet state shaped the former republics of Soviet Central Asia.
Fall 2025
Fall 2026
Prerequisite: Instructor-Managed Waitlist. Propaganda, Russia and the World Information War is a highly current guide to propaganda and disinformation, the geopolitical impact of information, and how false, weaponized narratives threaten the world's news and information environment.
Fall 2025
Fall 2026
South Asia
Students wishing to request permission to count a course not listed above may do so using this form (UNI login required). The request must include a copy of the syllabus and a brief rationale explaining why the course should count toward the selected regional minor.
MIA Sample Pathways
| Term |
MIA-Track I |
Credits |
MIA-Track II |
Credits |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fall I | Politics I: International Relations |
1.5 |
Policy Skills I |
1.5 |
| Politics II |
1.5 |
Policy Skills II |
1.5 |
|
| Policy Skills I |
1.5 |
Microeconomic Analysis |
3 |
|
| Policy Skills II |
1.5 |
Quantitative Analysis I |
3 |
|
| Economics Fundamentals for International Affairs |
3 |
International Law |
1.5 |
|
| International Law |
1.5 |
Concentration I |
3 |
|
| Concentration I |
3 |
Career Advancement Professional Development | N/A | |
| Career Advancement Professional Development | N/A | |||
| Semester Total | 13.5 | Semester Total | 13.5 | |
| Spring I | Quantitative Analysis I |
3 |
Politics I: International Relations |
1.5 |
| Leadership & Management I |
1.5 |
Politics II |
1.5 |
|
| Leadership & Management II |
1.5 |
Macroeconomic Analysis |
3 |
|
| Global Requirement I |
3 |
Leadership & Management I |
1.5 |
|
| Concentration II |
3 |
Quantitative Analysis II |
3 |
|
| Concentration III |
3 |
Concentration II |
3 |
|
| Semester Total |
15 |
Semester Total |
13.5 |
|
| Summer | Internship |
N/A |
Internship |
N/A |
| Fall II | Ethics in Public Policy |
1.5 |
Ethics in Public Policy |
1.5 |
| Capstone/Thesis Preparatory Workshop |
1.5 |
Capstone/Thesis Preparatory Workshop |
1.5 |
|
| Leadership & Management III or Financial Management I |
1.5 |
Global Requirement I |
3 |
|
| Global Requirement II |
3 |
Concentration III |
3 |
|
| Concentration IV |
3 |
Concentration IV |
3 |
|
| Elective/Minor I |
3 |
Elective/Minor I |
3 |
|
| Semester Total |
13.5 |
Semester Total |
15 |
|
|
|
|
|||
| Spring II | Capstone Workshop or Thesis |
3 |
Capstone Workshop or Thesis |
3 |
| Concentration V |
3 |
Concentration V |
3 |
|
| Elective/Minor II |
3 |
Elective/Minor II |
3 |
|
| Elective/Minor III |
3 |
Elective/Minor III |
3 |
|
| Semester Total |
12 |
Semester Total |
12 |
|
| Program Total |
54 |
Program Total |
54 |
Graduation Requirements
All Master of International Affairs students must meet all of the following requirements to be approved for graduation:
- Complete 54 credits in residence at SIPA.*
- Credits must be earned in graduate-level courses numbered 4000 or higher. The sole exception is intermediate-level language courses used to satisfy the modern foreign language requirement.
- All non-SIPA coursework must be directly related to the degree program.
- Complete 4 residency units.*
- Complete all degree core and concentration requirements.*
- Maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher.
- Resolve any pending grades. All grades must be final before graduation. Any notations indicating a pending grade, such as “IN” (Incomplete), “CP” (Credit Pending), or “AR” (Academic Referral), must be converted to a final grade.
- Complete and submit the Application for Degree or Certificate by the appropriate deadline.
*Requirements for dual-degree students may differ.
In addition to the above, please note that grade changes cannot be made after a student has graduated.
Tracking MIA Degree Requirements
-
Students can use the Degree Audit Report (DAR) in Stellic to track their academic progress.
-
The DAR is an unofficial guide to the MIA core.
-
To request revisions to the Degree Audit Report, please fill out the Degree Audit Report Correction Form and submit the form to the Student Affairs Office.
-
Degree Audit Report Correction Form
Concentration Declaration
-
All students are required to declare a concentration. SIPA permits MIA students to change their concentration after admission. For more information, visit the Changing Academic Programs page.
Tracking Concentration Requirements
-
Concentration audit forms are designed to help students and concentration directors determine if the concentration requirements have been met. All MIA students are required to complete one concentration to graduate, except for those pursuing dual degrees with other schools at Columbia University.
-
Students are required to meet with their concentration director once per semester at SIPA to ensure they are fulfilling the appropriate requirements for their concentration. Prior to their final semester, students should meet with their concentration director and have the concentration director approve the degree audit form on Stellic.
-
Concentration audit form deadlines are August 1 for October graduation, November 1 for February graduation, and January 29 for May graduation.