Regional and Community Development

The Concentration in Regional and Community Development (RCD) offers a Ph.D. degree program founded on the premise that strong theory and research are the basis for solving problems related to the social, economic, and political development of localities worldwide. The Geography Graduate Group (GGG) faculty who teach and mentor students in this concentration work in the areas of urban studies, rural development, migration studies, communications research, urban design, the political economy of social networks, and global-local interconnections.

Understanding the current dynamics of community development requires the analysis of the networks of social practice that interact in the social construction of place. The networks are both local and extra-local in scope, linking local social actors to wider social fields like state- and non-governmentally based organizations, corporate business networks, and transnational migrant networks. Investigating networks requires innovative approaches to theoretically driven research seeking to: (a) map the social organizations involved in the politics of community development and the ties connecting them; (b) comprehend the multiple contexts in which interacting networks are produced and changed; (c) grasp normative structures guiding these interactions; and, (d) assess changing patterns of community development resulting from cooperation and conflict.

The Ph.D. concentration in Regional and Community Development is based in the Community Studies and Development Unit of the Department of Human and Community Development at UC Davis and it also includes a multidisciplinary group of faculty who are members of the Community Development Graduate Group (CDGG) and the GGG.

The graduates of the Regional and Community Development doctoral program will be prepared to: (1) teach and conduct research in academic programs in community development; (2) serve as teaching and research faculty in related departments such as urban design, city planning, rural development, communications, and other applied social sciences; (3) serve as researchers and problem-focused analysts in public, private, and non-governmental research institutions; and, (4) assume leading positions in agencies engaged in issues of community development at the local, regional, national, transnational, and international scales.

Curriculum

The geography core course requirements must be fulfilled in addition to the curriculum listed for this concentration.

The Ph.D. Concentration in Regional and Community Development in the Geography Graduate Group consists of the following coursework: (1) a core theory course, (2) two methods courses, at least one of these in quantitative methods and (3) a minimum of 12 units of elective courses in the field.

PhD Concentration in Regional Community and Development – required courses
Core (4 units)
CRD 240 Community Development Theory
Methods (8 units chosen from the list below or approved by student’s Guidance Committee)
EDU 200* Educational Research
EDU 201 Qualitative Research in Education
EDU 202N Computer Analysis of Qualitative Data
POL 211* Research Methods in Political Science
SOC 206* Quantitive Analysis in Sociology
SOC 207 A/B* Methods of Quantitative Research
*quantitative methods

Electives (12 units chosen from the list below or approved by student’s Guidance Committee)
CRD 241 The Economics of Community Development
CRD 245 The Political Economy of Urban and Regional Development
CRD 246 The Political Economy of Transnational Migration
CRD 247 The Transformation of Work
CRD 248 Social Policy, Welfare Theories and Communities
CRD 248A/B Social Policy, Welfare Theories and Communities I & II