The Graduate Program in Cultural Information Resources' curriculum includes records and management of historical materials, document management that is composed of electronic documents and management from audio-visual information to library and tourism information.
Any university graduate can apply, regardless of field of studies.
Graduates from this program enjoy a variety of career options. Some enter other universities' doctoral programs and others play an active part in the field that requires a high level of professional knowledge for managing information resources. Different career options include, for example, computer specialists, such as system engineers, library staff managers, and the management of records in the private and public sectors.
People currently working in the field, either in the private or public sector, who have entered the specially designed program for professionals, benefit from applying their studies and research directly to their current work.
Degrees offered in this program are a Masters of Cultural Information Resources for completed course work and thesis and a Masters of Science for the completion of a thesis.
The Graduate Program in Legal Information Cultural Resources aims to foster institutional management professionals who have legal professional knowledge to deal with information property management such as literary property.
“An institutional management professional who has legal professional knowledge” refers to a person who can deal with many problems related to management especially regarding information property primarily based on the knowledge of contemporary law, in addition to the basic knowledge of constitutional and civil law, through his or her education and research in information related legal systems.
Through the legal study of the constitution, civil law, the commercial code, and criminal law, graduate students learn basic legal principles such as privacy, contract and illegal acts, and at the same time the basis of cultural information resources to use information resources. This program also offers courses in basic legal subjects and information related legal subjects such as the Act for the Protection of Computer Processed Personal Data, public resources, record management, information systems, and multimedia, giving students the professional knowledge with which they can develop their problem-solving and decision-making skills related to information property management.
Degrees offered in this program are a Masters of Sciences for completed course work with thesis , and a Masters of Law for completed course work with thesis.