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Public administration: roles for doctoral graduates
Data from ‘What Do Researchers Do?' shows that three and a half years after graduation 4.9% of doctoral graduates were employed in public administration three and a half years after graduation. Doctoral graduates from recent years are known to have worked in the sector in the following profiled roles.
- Actuaries
- Microbiologists
- Biochemists
- Biologists
- Chartered accountants
- Chemists and physicists
- Civil engineers
- Clinical psychologists
- Community pharmacists
- Conservation officers
- Doctors (including junior doctors, GPs and consultants)
- Economists
- Education officers
- Education psychologists
- Electrical engineers
- Electronic engineers
- Environmental health officers
- Financial analysts
- Investment bankers
- IT consultants
- IT systems developers
- Management consultants
- Social and market researchers
- Marketing executives
- Patents examiners, agents and officers
- Pharmacologists
- Production, works and maintenance managers
- Public relations officers
- Registrars and senior administrators of educational establishments
- Research and development managers
- Research mathematicians
- Research psychologists
- Science and engineering technicians
- Secondary teachers
- Social science, arts and humanities researchers
- Software designers, programmers and engineers
- Solicitors
- Statisticians
- Technical authors
- University and higher education lecturers
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