Global Affairs
Director of undergraduate studies: Bonnie Weir; jackson.yale.edu/academics/the-global-affairs-major/
The Global Affairs major gives students multidisciplinary training to understand and address challenges that we confront as concerned citizens of the world. By their nature, these challenges demand fluency in the approaches and frameworks from multiple disciplines in the social sciences and humanities as well as an ability to translate between scholarship and practice.
The Global Affairs major prepares Yale students for global citizenship and service while giving them the flexibility to shape their own curriculum according to their interests and ambitions. For example, students have concentrated their coursework on human rights and humanitarianism, economic development and poverty, global health, international relations, global environmental policy, and foreign policy and diplomacy, with topics relevant to national and human security.
Courses for Nonmajors
Most Global Affairs courses are open to both majors and nonmajors. If a Global Affairs course requires an application, the application will be posted on the Jackson School of Global Affairs website.
Prerequisites
There are no prerequisites for the Global Affairs major.
Introductory Requirements
Students must successfully complete eight introductory courses before they can declare Global Affairs as their major. Students are strongly encouraged to complete these introductory courses by the end of their sophomore year.
Once students have completed the introductory requirements, they must complete the major declaration form found on the Global Affairs website. After a student’s declaration form is reviewed, the University Registrar’s Office will process their formal entry into the major.
Introductory courses required to declare the Global Affairs major include the following:
(1) Introductory microeconomics (ECON 1108, ECON 1110, or ECON 1115)
(2) Introductory macroeconomics (ECON 1111 or ECON 1116)
(3) and (4) Two introductory Political Science courses from different subdisciplines: PLSC 1113 (International Relations), PLSC 1413 (Comparative Politics), or one of the following PLSC 1327, PLSC 1335, PLSC 1352, DRST 0005, or DRST 0006, or PHIL 1178 (Political Theory)
(5) and (6) Two History courses (any course with a HIST number, enrolling under the HIST number if a cross-listed course)
(7) GLBL 2121 (ideally taken fall of sophomore year and may not count as an elective)
(8) One advanced course, chosen from game theory (GLBL 2159/ECON 2259), intermediate micro- or macroeconomics (ECON 2121 or ECON 2122), or an approved qualitative methods course (these courses carry the YC GLBL Qualitative Methods attribute)
Requirements of the Major
Students are held to the requirements in place when they were accepted into the Global Affairs major. The following requirements, updated for the academic year 2025-2026, must be fulfilled by students entering the major starting in fall 2025.
See Links to the attributes indicating courses approved for Global Affairs major requirements.
Students must take fourteen courses, including the introductory courses. Beyond the eight introductory courses, the major requires 6 additional courses in addition to an L4 language requirement. Students are required to take GLBL 2122 (which may not count as an elective); GLBL 3101; and three global affairs electives from an approved group of courses in the departments of Global Affairs, History, Political Science, Economics, or other departments (these courses carry the YC GLBL Elective attribute). Only two of these three electives may be taught by Senior Fellows and are identified by the attribute, YC GLBL Senior Fellow Elective. Finally, students complete a senior project, either in GLBL 4499, a senior Capstone project, or as a senior essay, either in a seminar of their choosing or in GLBL 4500, the global affairs senior essay course.
Language requirement Global Affairs majors are required to take a course designated L4 in a modern language other than English.
Credit/D/Fail No course taken Credit/D/Fail may be applied to the requirements of the major, with the exception of a Cr (credit) grade in an L4 language course that may be used to demonstrate proficiency in a foreign language.
Outside credit and Study abroad Courses taken at another institution or during a summer or term-time study abroad program may count toward the major requirements with DUS approval after the credit has transferred to Yale. See Study Abroad.
Senior Requirement
Majors have three options to fulfill the senior requirement: They may complete a Capstone project in GLBL 4499, write a senior essay in a substantive seminar, or write a senior essay in the global affairs senior essay course GLBL 4500.
In Capstone projects, small groups of students are assigned to a policy task force in which they apply their academic training to a specific real-world problem relevant to global affairs. Each task force presents its findings and recommendations to an external partner such as a government agency, a nongovernmental organization or nonprofit group, or a private-sector organization in the United States or abroad. Capstones are offered only during the fall of the senior year (or, in the case of fall graduates, in the final semester).
Students may instead choose to complete a senior essay in either the fall or spring term of senior year, either in a substantive seminar of their choice or in the global affairs senior essay course GLBL 4500. Students are responsible for securing their own academic adviser and a secondary reader in both cases. Any current faculty member of Yale University may serve as a senior essay adviser and/or secondary reader.
Internships Students in the major are encouraged to take a summer internship in the field of Global Affairs after their junior year. The Jackson School Career Development Office can help students find appropriate internships.
Study Abroad Courses taken at another institution or during a summer or term-time study abroad program may count toward the major requirements with DUS approval after the credit has transferred to Yale. Courses taken abroad may count only as electives or, in rare instances, as introductory courses in the major. Global Affairs majors who plan to study abroad should therefore consult the DUS to devise a course of study prior to the term abroad, and to seek provisional approval for the proposed credit. Up to one summer term course and up to two courses per semester abroad may, with DUS approval, be counted toward the major requirements, with a total limit of four such credits.
SUMMARY OF MAJOR REQUIREMENTS
Prerequisites None
Introductory courses 8 courses (8 credits) required before declaring the major, to include 2 introductory Economics courses, one from ECON 1108, ECON 1110, or ECON 1115, and one from either ECON 1111 or ECON 1116; 2 Political Science courses from different subdisciplines, as indicated; 2 History courses; GLBL 2121; 1 adv course in intermediate micro- or macroeconomics, game theory, or an approved qualitative methods course
Number of courses 14 courses (14 credits), including intro courses and senior req; excluding the language req
Specific courses required GLBL 2122 and GLBL 3101
Distribution of courses 3 approved electives
Language requirement L4 in one modern language other than English
Senior requirement GLBL 4499 or GLBL 4500 or in an approved senior seminar
14 courses (14 credits), including introductory courses and senior requirement (excluding the L4 language requirement)
Introductory courses (8 credits)
- ECON 1108, or ECON 1110, or ECON 1115
- ECON 1111 or ECON 1116
- 2 introductory PLSC courses from different subdisciplines (see Overview)
- 2 HIST courses
- GLBL 2121
- 1 advanced course, chosen from following topics: game theory, intermediate micro- or macroeconomics, or approved qualitative methods course (see Overview)
Required courses beyond Intro courses (6 credits)
- GLBL 2122
- GLBL 3101
- 3 GLBL electives, which carry the YC GLBL Elective attribute (only 2 of these may be taught by GLBL Senior Fellow)
- GLBL 4499, GLBL 4500, or senior essay written in a senior seminar
The Global Affairs major prepares Yale students for global leadership and service by training them in analytical frameworks across disciplines, including Political Science, Economics, and History, and in teaching students how to translate from theory to practice. The major gives students the flexibility to shape their own curriculum according to their interests and ambitions. For example, students have concentrated their coursework on human rights and humanitarianism, economic development and poverty, global health, international relations, global environmental policy, and foreign policy and diplomacy, with topics relevant to national and human security.
All majors are required to take introductory courses across Political Science, Economics, and History, a quantitative analysis sequence, a global affairs advanced core course, a choice of an advanced course in intermediate economics, game theory, or qualitative methods, and to take at least three additional approved electives. During the senior year, each major completes either a capstone course or a senior thesis.
There are no prerequisites for the Global Affairs major.
Introductory Requirements
Students must successfully complete eight introductory courses before they can declare Global Affairs as their major. Students are strongly encouraged to complete these introductory courses by the end of their sophomore year.
Once students have completed the introductory requirements, they must complete the major declaration form found on the Global Affairs website. After a student’s declaration form is reviewed, the registrar’s office will process their formal entry into the major.
Introductory courses required to declare the Global Affairs major include the following:
(1) Introductory microeconomics (ECON 1108, ECON 1110, or ECON 1115);
(2) Introductory macroeconomics (ECON 1111 or ECON 1116);
(3) and (4) Two introductory Political Science courses from different subdisciplines: PLSC 1113 (International Relations), PLSC 1413 (Comparative Politics), or one of the following political theory courses: PLSC 1327, PLSC 1335, PLSC 1352, DRST 0005, or DRST 0006;
(5) and (6) Two History courses (any course with a HIST number, enrolling under the HIST number if a cross-listed course);
(7) GLBL 2121 (Applied Quantitative Analysis I), ideally taken fall of sophomore year; and
(8) One advanced course, choosing from game theory (GLBL 2159/ECON 2259), intermediate micro- or macroeconomics (ECON 2121 or ECON 2122), or an approved qualitative methods course (these courses carry the YC GLBL Qualitative Methods attribute)
Most Global Affairs courses are open to nonmajors. For more information about courses and the major in Global Affairs visit the School of Global Affairs website.
FACULTY ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROGRAM OF GLOBAL AFFAIRS
Professors Lorenzo Caliendo (Economics, School of Management), David Engerman (History), Jennifer Gandhi (Political Science), Pinelopi Goldberg (Economics, School of Management), Paul Kennedy (History), Amit Khandelwal (Economics), James Levinsohn (Dean) (School of Management), Christopher Neilson (Economics), Catherine Panter-Brick (Anthropology), Laura Robson (History), Ken Scheve (Political Science), Ian Shapiro (Political Science), Timothy Snyder (History), Aleh Tsyvinski (Economics), Arne Westad (History)
Associate Professors Kate Baldwin (Political Science), Alden Young (History)
Assistant Professors Lauren Falcao Bergquist (Economics), Mayara Felix (Economics)
Senior Lecturers Marnix Amand (Economics), Teresa Chahine (School of Management), Cara Fallon (Global Health), Asha Rangappa, David Simon, Justin Thomas, Bonnie Weir, Edward Wittenstein
Lecturers Eric Braverman, Michael Brenes, Christopher Fussell, Ardina Hasanbasri, Robert Hecht, Phil Kaplan, William Casey King, David Morse, Graeme Reid, Emma Sky, Rory Stewart, Jed Sundwall, Matthew Trevithick, Daniel Wilkinson
See the Roadmap Library for a visual representation of the major.