The University of Tartu is Estonia's leading research and development institution with more than 1400 Doctoral students conducting research at the university each year. More than 100 doctoral degrees are defended annually (more than half of the total number in Estonia). Doctoral schools at the UT facilitate special projects, foster international collaboration and bring extra funding and support for PhD studies, including international seminars and practical skills training. UT belongs to the top 1% of the world's most-cited universities and research institutions in the fields of Clinical Medicine, Chemistry, Environment/Ecology, Plant and Animal Science, Geosciences, Social Sciences (general), Biology and Biochemistry and Engineering (ISI Web of Science 2016). A total of 38 UT scientist belong to the top 1% of most quoted scientists in the world (UT Science in Numbers). A PhD programme lasts for 4 years and requires 240 ECTS (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation Syst...
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