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complete master’s degree options in as few as 12 months

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Explore Master’s Degrees

Public Administration

Master of Public Administration


Prepare to lead positive change through a rigorous yet efficient array of skills-building courses.

  • On campus, in Syracuse, N.Y.
  • 40 credits plus optional internships
  • Complete full-time in 12 to 18 months

Executive Master of Public Administration—On Campus or Online


Fill gaps in your knowledge with a program tailored to your career goals—five to seven years of experience required. An online option for working professionals provides added flexibility.

  • Online or on campus in Syracuse, N.Y., options (separate programs)
  • 30 credits
  • Complete part- or full-time in as few as 12 to 15 months

International Relations

Master of Arts in International Relations


Satisfy your curiosity about the world, and develop skills and knowledge to change it for the better.

  • On campus, in Syracuse, N.Y.
  • 40 credits with a required global internship
  • Required career track selection to focus your studies
  • Complete full-time in 18 months

Master of Arts in Public Diplomacy and Global Communications


Prepare to drive change in a range of international contexts through effective public and interpersonal communications. One powerful degree, two schools: the Maxwell School and the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

  • On campus, in Syracuse, N.Y., and Washington, D.C.
  • 43 credits with a required global internship
  • Complete full-time in 18 months

Executive Master's in International Relations


Improve your leadership and management skills and global affairs knowledge—seven years of experience required.

  • On campus, in Syracuse, N.Y.
  • 30 credits
  • Complete on a part- or full-time basis

Executive Master’s in International Relations in D.C.


Leverage the combined experience, knowledge and networks of two top-ranked institutions—the Maxwell School and the Center for Strategic and International Studies—and earn your degree while you work in D.C. Seven years of experience required.

  • On campus, in Washington, D.C.
  • 30 credits
  • Complete part-time in as few as 18 to 20 months
Not sure which master’s degree is right for you? Take our Public Service Careers Quiz and find your best-fit program.

Doctoral Program

PhD in Public Administration


Educate the next generation of public service leaders and conduct research that moves the field of public administration and policy analysis forward.

  • On campus, in Syracuse, N.Y.
  • 72 credits (36 credits beyond the M.A.)
  • Full-time residential program, typically completed in 4.5 years

Department Admission Events

We offer a range of in-person and virtual opportunities to learn more about the Maxwell School and degree programs offered by the Public Administration and International Affairs Department, answer questions about the application process, and help you work toward your goals.

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Schedule a One-on-One Meeting

to ask more in-depth questions not covered in the group information sessions. These individual meetings are informational in nature and are not admission interviews.  

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Study in Washington, D.C.

Our D.C. headquarters at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, top-ranked by the Global Go To Think Tank Index, gives students access to leading minds in the world of policy and international affairs, competitive internships, employment opportunities and a deeply engaged network of D.C.-based alumni.

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Need a midcareer boost? Explore our Certificates of Advanced Study


We offer a variety of regional, topical and skills-based Certificates of Advanced Study (CAS) to help you focus and refine your expertise. Some CAS can be earned as part of a master's program while others can be earned independent of a degree. Learn to use data to formulate and analyze policy, deepen your knowledge of effective public management practices, develop techniques to promote collaboration and resolve conflicts, broaden your expertise in a specific region of the world, and more.

PAIA students gathered in conference room

Johannes Himmelreich Receives National Endowment for the Humanities Grant

September 13, 2023

The funding will support his research on ethical dilemmas in data science, culminating in a co-authored book manuscript.

Johannes Himmelreich

Johannes Himmelreich


Johannes Himmelreich, assistant professor of public administration and international affairs, has received a $73,670 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for a forthcoming two-year project titled “Good Decisions: Data Science as a Moral Practice.”

Drawing from concepts in philosophy, the project will examine inherent ethical dilemmas in the practice of data science and each stage of the data cycle. Specifically, the project analyzes how techniques that extract value from data relate to theories of justice, hidden assumptions in data analysis, and the plural range of values in society. How researchers in management, statistics or computer science collect, clean, analyze and communicate data, Himmelreich argues, are of social, philosophical and civic concern. Himmelreich plans to produce a book manuscript co-authored with Sebastian Köhler, associate professor of philosophy in the Philosophy and Law Department at the Frankfurt School of Finance & Management.

Funding is provided through the Dangers and Opportunities of Technology: Perspectives from the Humanities program at the NEH. The program is part of a special initiative called “American Tapestry: Weaving Together Past, Present, and Future” that supports humanities research that advances democracy, equity and solutions to climate change.

In 2022, Himmelreich received funding to study values in public sector data science through the Appleby-Mosher Fund for Faculty Research at Syracuse University. The fund provides grants each year to Maxwell faculty for research expenses.

Himmelreich is a senior research associate in the Autonomous Systems Policy Institute and Campbell Public Affairs Institute. His broader work explores the relationship between data, technology, artificial intelligence and autonomous systems—such as drones, self-driving cars or machine learning—and questions of ethics, agency, governance and moral responsibility. He received a Ph.D. from the London School of Economics in 2016. 

By Mike Kelly

Published in the Fall 2023 issue of the Maxwell Perspective

Public Administration and International Affairs Department
215 Eggers Hall