If the preliminary examination statements are favourable, the faculty grants the doctoral candidate permission to proceed to the public examination. Depending on the faculty, the decision is made either by the dean or by the faculty council.
The grading committee includes the opponent, a custos and one or two faculty representatives as deemed appropriate by the faculty. The faculty council appoints the grading committee for the dissertation. Depending on the faculty, the grading committee is appointed either at the beginning of the preliminary examination, i.e. at the same meeting where the preliminary examiners are appointed, or after the preliminary examination, i.e. at the same meeting where the permit to defend is granted. Two opponents may be appointed in special cases; for example, if required by the dissertation’s cross-disciplinary subject. One of the preliminary examiners may also be appointed as an opponent.
The opponents are subject to the same competence and disqualification rules as the preliminary examiners. The doctoral candidate’s coordinating academic submits the proposal on the opponent once they have consulted the supervisors. In practice, the main responsibility for finding a suitable opponent usually falls to the supervisors.
A professor or an associate professor at the faculty is appointed to act as the Custos in the public examination. A supervisor of the thesis who holds the title of docent and is employed by the faculty can also act as a Custos. If Custos is a supervisor or is otherwise disqualified, he or she may not participate in proposing a grade for the dissertation.
The faculty representatives must be professors, docents or docent-level members of the teaching and research staff at the University of Helsinki. In most faculties, the custos can also act as a faculty representative if they are not one of the dissertation supervisors.
Faculties’ instructions for the members of the grading committee are available on the faculties’ external websites.