Ph. D in Environmental Management course

PhD

In Mumbai (India)

£ 2,878.38 VAT inc.

*Indicative price

Original amount in INR:

₹ 300,000

Description

  • Type

    PhD

  • Location

    Mumbai (India)

  • Duration

    2 Years

  • Start date

    Different dates available

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Mumbai (India)
See map
Thane, 401107

Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

About this course

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

Post Graduates / MBA candidates specialization in the respective field.

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:
• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing
• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields
• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions
To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.
Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

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Subjects

  • Play
  • Full Time
  • Systems
  • School
  • Economics
  • Primary
  • Information Systems management
  • Systems Architecture
  • Information Systems
  • Mentoring
  • Management
  • Managing Diversity
  • Environmental Health
  • Environmental Impact
  • Environmental Engineering
  • Environmental Art
  • Biology Science
  • Environmental
  • Environment Manager
  • Environmental Audit

Course programme

For Ph. D

PH. D

Synopsis or objectives are very important . Candidate should select a topic pertaining to their core competencies. Candidate has to follow a writing module and prepare for the oral exam held at the respective University

The doctoral program is a full-time course of study, typically four years post-baccalaureate. The program of study leading to the doctoral degree is organized to attain the following objectives:

• To enable students to engage in advanced study and research with scholars in a variety of information fields, such as economics of information, human-computer interaction, library and information services, organizational issues, archives and records management, new systems architecture, digital libraries, information systems management, and digital documents/digital publishing

• To foster original and scholarly research that contributes to all of these fields

• To enable graduates to integrate their professional education and experience with the larger problems of the information professions

To reach these objectives, students in the doctoral program work closely with one or more faculty members of the school and from their related fields of study. A student’s primary advisor is a key factor to success in graduate school. Members of the field preliminary and dissertation committees will also play important mentoring roles in a student’s academic progress.

Upon admission to the school, each PhD student is assigned a faculty advisor. This faculty member will assist you in developing your first year of study. As you come to know the faculty better and your research interests crystallize, you may find another faculty member who would better serve that role.

Ph. D in Environmental Management course

£ 2,878.38 VAT inc.

*Indicative price

Original amount in INR:

₹ 300,000