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  1. Facts about the PhD programmes. Requires a completed Master’s degree. Stipulated length of three years’ full-time studies. 2.5 years of independent research work. Educational component worth 30 credits. In 2018, 468 PhD candidates successfully defended their theses at the University of Oslo.

  2. Jul 20, 2010 · Doctoral degree (PhD) After completing the master's degree it is possible to continue with a doctoral degree (PhD degree). The doctoral education has a nominal length of three years and takes place within the framework of an organized programme. The doctoral education consists of a dissertation and an educational component.

  3. Feb 11, 2021 · Admission to PhD-programmes. How to upload documents. Last modified Feb. 11, 2021 7:45 AM by karensik@uio.no. For your application to the PhD-programme to be case processed, you must have uploaded all obligatory documentation. At the end of each application period we will formally dismiss all applications lacking obligatory documentation.

  4. Read this story on the University of Oslo's website. ... The faculty has over 800 active PhD candidates and more than 130 candidates defend their dissertations annually.

  5. Doctoral degree: PhD in medicine and health sciences. You can work with some of Europe's best researchers in medicine and health sciences, and take part in exciting research projects. The PhD programme at the Faculty of Medicine is the largest at UiO. Annually, more than 200 doctoral candidates publicly defend their thesis at the Faculty.

  6. The faculty is research-intensive and highly-ranked internationally. Society needs graduates with strong analytical skills. Therefore, our PhD programme will deliver a research education that focuses on academic excellence. Our graduates will perform research at the forefront of their fields, will acquire a set of skills that will also serve ...

  7. For doctoral research fellows employed at the University of Oslo and the Faculty of Law. Information on pay, leave, illness and extension of the study period can be found on the University of Oslo’s For employees web pages. The faculty also has its own pages for research fellows (in Norwegian).