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Course Criteria
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5.00 Credits
No course description available.
Prerequisite:
Separate File
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5.00 Credits
Provides an introduction to the debates over globalization. Focuses on the growth and intensification of global ties. Addresses the resulting inequalities and tensions, as well as the new opportunities for cultural and political exchange. Topics include the impacts on government, finance, labor, culture, the environment, health, and activism. Offered: jointly with GEOG 123.
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5.00 Credits
Chirot, Kasaba, Migdal Origins of the modern world system in the sixteenth century and its history until World War I. Interacting forces of politics and economics around the globe, with particular attention to key periods of expansion and crisis.
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5.00 Credits
Provides a historical understanding of the twentieth century and major global issues today. Focuses on interdisciplinary social science theories, methods, and information relating to global processes and on developing analytical and writing skills to engage complex questions of causation and effects of global events and forces. Recommended: SIS 200. Offered: WSp.
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5.00 Credits
Cultural interaction among societies and civilizations, particularly Western and non- Western. Intellectual, cultural, social, and artistic aspects; historical factors.
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5.00 Credits
Chaloupka Investigation of the relationship between science, technology and society. Nuclear physics and molecular biology serves as concrete examples of fields with significant impact on society. Offered jointly with PHYS 216, Sp.
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5.00 Credits
Waugh History of cultural and economic exchange across Eurasia from the early Common Era to modern times. Topics include spread of religions such as Islam and Buddhism, overland trade in rare commodities, interaction between nomadic and sedentary cultures, the role of empires, the culture of daily life, and the arts. Offered: jointly with HIST 225.
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5.00 Credits
Origins and conduct of war; readings from anthropology, political science, economics, and history, as well as novels and some recent works on the arms-control controversy. Modern forms of warfare, including guerrilla war, world war, and nuclear war. Offered: jointly with SOC 301.
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5.00 Credits
Perspectives on foreign cultures through literary example. Interdisciplinary approaches to the study of culture as such and problems of intercultural relations.
Prerequisite:
either one 200-level ANTH course, LING 203 or SIS 202
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5.00 Credits
Introduces key theoretical debates in international migration. Examines immigrants’ political, economic, religious, and social integration into host societies, and continued ties to homelands. Experiences of voluntary and involuntary immigrants, of the second generation, and of incorporation into America and Europe. Designed around interdisciplinary texts and fieldwork in Seattle.
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