Jørgensen, Lise Bender (1998). «The state of Denmark». I Margarita Díaz-Andreu García and Marie Louise Stig Sørensen. Excavating women: a history of women in European archaeology. London: Routledge. s. 231. ISBN0415157609. «In recent years, the Anglo-Saxon style degree of PhD has been introduced, and is now replacing the degree of mag. art. At present, both mag. art. and PhD degrees are around. They are not identical, but their position in the educational system as the degree you take at the end of postgraduate studies is the same.»
«Higher education». Danish Agency for International Education. Arkivert fra originalen 21. august 2010. Besøkt 29. august 2010. «Mature researchers may obtain the traditional higher Danish doctoral degree (doktorgrad), usually after a minimum of 5–8 years of individual and original research (following a candidatus degree, a mag.art. degree or a ph.d. degree in the relevant field of study) and public defence of a dissertation.»
ku.dk
universitetshistorie.ku.dk
«Magisterkonferens». Københavns Universitet. Besøkt 10. september 2019. «Som forsker-rekrutteringsgrundlag blev den erstattet af ph.d.-uddannelsen, og magisterkonferensen blev endeligt afskaffet i 2007.»
«Higher education». Danish Agency for International Education. Arkivert fra originalen 21. august 2010. Besøkt 29. august 2010. «Mature researchers may obtain the traditional higher Danish doctoral degree (doktorgrad), usually after a minimum of 5–8 years of individual and original research (following a candidatus degree, a mag.art. degree or a ph.d. degree in the relevant field of study) and public defence of a dissertation.»