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43.308: History of Crime and Social ControlCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Analyzes the causes and development of attempts to control crime, ethnic conflict, radical protest movements, urban disorders, and attitude and role conflicts.
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43.310: History of New EnglandCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Explores the evolution of New England society from pre-Columbian to the Post-Industrial, emphasizing the ways succeeding generations of New Englanders have confronted social and economic change. Topics include: white-Indian relations, ecological change, Puritanism, the New England town, the industrial revolution, the rise of cities, immigration, ethnic and class conflict, and the distinctiveness of the region.
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43.310 - History of New EnglandCredits
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43.311: History of Science ICredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Explores the rise of the modern understanding of nature and the natural world as it developed in Western Europe, beginning with the establishment of universities and their elaboration of Aristotelian ideas and methods and the various institutional and cultural contexts in which they developed through the Renaissance, Scientific Revolution, and Enlightenment.
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43.311 - History of Science ICredits
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43.312: Science and Modern WorldCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Examines the role of science in European and American society though the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The course explores the development of new scientific theories in the life sciences and the physical sciences (including evolution, relativity, quantum mechanics, and genetics), addresses the institutionalization of science in Western society, and considers how science came to be applied to various social, cultural, and military concerns of the modern world.
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43.312 - Science and Modern WorldCredits
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43.313: American Social HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course investigates various aspects of common peoples lives in early America and the United States, ranging from gender roles among the Cherokee to the music preferences of late-twentieth century teenagers.
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43.313 - American Social HistoryCredits
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43.316: American Environmental HistoryCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 This course explores the environmental history of early America and the United States from the end of the last ice age (c. 12,500 years ago) to the present. It examines the role played by nature as an historical agent as well as the relationship between human communities and the physical and organic environment. Course themes include evolving land use, the environmental significance of industrial capitalism, urban public health, resource conservation and wilderness protection, the impact of ecology on public consciousness, as well as environmentalism. Not for Freshman level
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43.316 - American Environmental HistoryCredits
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43.319: Women Gender and ScienceCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3
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43.319 - Women Gender and ScienceCredits
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43.320: American East Asian RelationsCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 The course examines relations between the United States on one hand and Japan, Korea, China, Vietnam, and the Philippines on the other in the 19th and 20th centuries. Besides political, trade, and cultural relations, there is also emphasis on American laws and practices regarding immigrants from these East Asian countries. The aim of the course is for students to gain a basic knowledge of American relations with East Asia and to develop analytical skills for sophisticated inter-national relations. Pre-Req: 43.304 China and the Modern World or 43.296 US Diplomatic History
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43.321: The HolocaustCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 In a world in which genocide is real, the murder of six-to-eight million Jews between 1939 and 1945 remains a critical topic of inquiry. When were factories of death first conceived? What perverse rationale motivated the collaborators who built and operated the gas chambers and crematoria? This course will answer questions of this kind by examining the most respected scholars who have written on and primary sources that speak directly to the Holocaust
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43.322: Chinese Foreign PolicyCredits
3.00 Credits
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
3 Chinese foreign policy since 1949 with a strong emphasis on tracing the links between historical, ideological, and cultural influences, on the one hand, and pragmatic and nationalistic considerations on the other. While tracing these links, the course explores the intricate process of policymaking in the People's Republic of China. Pre-Req: 43.304 China and the Modern World or 43.296 US Diplomatic History
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