PhD Socio-Cultural Studies
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Introduction
The deadline to apply for September 2025 entry is Monday 30 June 2025.
We play a leading role in large methodological initiatives hosted at Edinburgh
Edinburgh is one of the leading international centres of excellence for postgraduate study in sociology. Our PhD degree has Economic and Social Research Council funding for UK and EU students, but our postgraduate research students come from all over the world and we have a vibrant and diverse postgraduate student community.
Socio-cultural studies is an interdisciplinary area of research. Ideas about culture have always been of interest across the social sciences, both as a synonym for the social and in the sense of popular and elite culture. The development of cultural studies over the last few decades has challenged disciplinary preserves on such matters. The PhD in Socio-Cultural Studies helps students develop a sociologically informed and interdisciplinary exploration of sociocultural topics, theories and methodologies, to underpin ‘hands-on’ research in these areas of inquiry.
Research areas
Our PhD programmes accommodate a great variety of work intellectually and methodologically. We have particular research strengths in the areas of:
- culture
- digital sociology
- finance and economic sociology
- environment and energy
- intimacy
- nationalism and political action
- race and decolonisation
But this list does not do full justice to the breadth of work undertaken by our PhD researchers. This work also includes a variety of research approaches and our staff are equipped to supervise:
- advanced quantitative analysis
- digital research
- qualitative and ethnographic methods
- documentary analysis
- mixed methods
We play a leading role in large methodological initiatives hosted at Edinburgh, including: one of the key UK units of the ESRC National Centre for Research Methods and the Applied Quantitative Methods Network, as well as the University's Centres for Research on Families and Relationships, Centre for South Asian Studies and Centre of Canadian Studies.
Our staff
Our staff are also highly diverse in their origins and the geographical scope of their expertise. We do research covering the UK and other parts of Europe; the Americas (including Latin America); Africa; and across the Middle East, South and East Asia (including China). The work of our PhD researchers also reflects this geographical diversity.
- Programme overview
Aims
We provide the necessary training and guidance to support students' own PhD research and develop their scholarly potential while also equipping them with wider skills, knowledge and experience as the basis for a career within or outside academia.
PhD researchers in Sociology are allocated a supervisor and a co-supervisor, who advise on the entirety of the research process, from reading and assembling ideas, fieldwork, analysing empirical or theoretical materials, writing up chapters, completing the thesis, and the viva examination which rounds off the process. You are encouraged to contact staff with similar interests to yours and discuss ideas prior to application.
Structure
All first year PhD students in Sociology participate in the Sociology Postgraduate Research Seminar, which runs throughout the academic year. As well as having a cohort- and community-building purpose, this equips students with the scholarly skills necessary to succeed in their studies and research. It concludes with a research conference in which first year PhD students play a leading role.
First year PhD students are also expected to follow the research training courses most appropriate for their proposed methods, and to develop their knowledge of relevant literature and their research design, culminating in submission of a full research proposal 9-12 months after commencement of studies.
Subsequent years of the PhD are devoted to research, data analysis and writing of the thesis, alongside any further specific or general training students require or choose to follow. Typically, there are also opportunities for paid teaching employment throughout.
- Supervisors and topics
While we will consider any PhD topic for supervision, to help you identify potential supervisors you might review the key people under our key research themes to see if any of these match your interests. Here you can also find (via the Methods theme) some indication of our areas of particular methodological expertise. You can also review all the personal pages and interests of our academic staff.
Applying for this PhD
- Identify potential supervisors suited to your research interests
- Write a draft research proposal
- Contact the Postgraduate Advisor with your research proposal and list of potential supervisors
- Once discussed with the Postgraduate Advisor, formally submit your application on EUCLID
Postgraduate Advisor