Doctor of Business Administration

The degree of Doctor of Business Administration (abbreviated DBA or D.B.A. and equivalent to Ph.D. in Business Administration), is a highest academic degree and a research doctorate in business administration. The D.B.A. requires advanced coursework and research beyond the master-level degree that normally results in a dissertation and possible journal publication that contributes to business practice.

Purpose and recognition

The D.B.A. is equivalent to Ph.D in Business Administration.[1] The D.B.A. tends more towards applied research rather than theoretical research, especially during the thesis writing phase. Schools such as Harvard Business School, Manchester Business School, University of Florida, Grand Canyon University and IE Business School offer the D.B.A. Research-oriented universities with D.B.A programs in the U.S. such as Harvard Business School tend to offer programs only on a full-time basis whereas D.B.A. programs at research-oriented universities in other countries tend to offer programs on the executive part-time basis.[2] Part-time programs allow someone to pursue the research degree while still working.

The portion of the program that consists of advanced coursework may be comparable to that of a PhD.[3] However the larger part of the program, consisting of independent research and the writing of a thesis, is likely geared towards more applied research in D.B.A. programs, with the research making a direct contribution to business practice.[4][5] Another way to see the distinction is that PhDs aim at the creation of new theory, while D.B.A.s aim at applying theory to solving contemporary business problems.[6][7]

Contribution

A typical D.B.A. program has a dual purpose: (1) to contribute to both theory and practice in relation to business and management; and (2) to develop professional practice and to contribute to professional knowledge of management. Both the D.B.A. and PhD in Business Administration are terminal degrees, allowing the recipient to obtain a tenure-track position.

Geographic distribution

DBA programs are offered worldwide. The majority, however, is offered in Europe (42 percent), followed by North America (28 percent) and the Asia-Pacific region (22 percent). 6 percent of the programs are offered in Africa and 2 percent in Latin America and the Caribbean. Most professional doctorates in management were founded in the last 10 years and more than half of them in Europe.[8]

Structure and format

Typical entry requirements include M.B.A., MSc, or similar masters degrees, or equivalent qualifications in general management, or in a functional field by examination awarded by a professional body. Some universities also ask for significant experience in a managerial or professional supervisory position involving responsibility for strategic issues. The D.B.A. normally requires a significant thesis, dissertation or final comprehensive project including a formal defense and approval by nominated examiners or an officially sanctioned and qualified doctoral review committee. The degree is conferred when all coursework, testing, and written research are completed and reviewed and approved by the awarding institution.

D.B.A. candidates may specialize in areas such as management science, technology management, organizational behavior, economics, or finance or other practical fields. Curricula may be offered on a full-time or part-time basis. According to the European higher education standards set by the Bologna Process, it is stated that the normal duration of a doctorate should correspond to 3–4 years of full-time study.

D.B.A. program

The responsibility for the overall structure of a D.B.A or other doctoral programs resides within the graduate research degrees committees or their equivalent within the university. As such, D.B.A programs must have a specific set of university regulations and must be subject to appropriate quality approval processes. Regulations should include reference to protocols for treating ethical issues in research, including those involving researchers working within the organisation that employs them and/or having access to privileged information. The implementations as above are widely used in Australian Universities, for instance a D.B.A student cannot embark into research phase before passing all his/her courseworks, research proposal and ethics, upon passing proposal stage, he/she still needs to clear ethics from Ethics Committee. Even after completing the dissertation writing, the D.B.A candidate still needs to go through numerous internal moderations of the dissertation before submitting to external examinations (at least two external examiners). For successful candidates in the external examinations stage, they usually need to revise their dissertations before final approval from the D.B.A committee of granting the degree. The research phase is always a tedious and demanding phase.

Notable persons with a D.B.A. degree

See also

References

  1. http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ous/international/usnei/us/doctorate.doc
  2. http://www.dbastudies.com/rapidmaps/
  3. Harvard Business School FAQ on doctoral programs
  4. http://weatherhead.case.edu/degrees/doctor-management/ Case Western Reserve-Doctor of Management
  5. http://www.tiasnimbas.edu/Doctor_of_Business_Administration/pgeId=311 TiasNimbas: Doctor of Business Administration
  6. http://www.allbusinessschools.com/business-careers/business-school-101/dba-phd All Business Schools: DBA vs. PhD in Business Administration Programs
  7. http://www.mba.athabascau.ca/titanweb/au/webcms.nsf/AllDoc/B432DD075D38015987257076007C6B25?Opendocument Athabasca University: DBA vs PhD
  8. "Global DBA Survey 2014".
  9. http://www.dentalhealth.org/about-us/board-of-trustees
  10. 10.0 10.1 http://www.financialadvisormagazine.com/component/content/article/4-front-liine-news/13-frontline-news.html
  11. http://www.ggu.edu/graduate/faculty/bio/david-yeske

http://www.gcu.edu/degree-programs/doctor-of-business-administration-with-an-emphasis-in-management