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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Critically examines topics relating to social forces, parties, and interest groups. Analyzes concepts, theories, and case studies with particular emphasis on Western political systems. Also examines party systems in comparison and the role of groups and the determinants of group politics. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Provides an advanced readings course for international relations graduate students. Acts as a capstone course for those preparing to take the PhD comprehensive exams, and is intended to provide in-depth knowledge about core areas of international relations scholarship. Prereq., PSCI 7013. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Prepares students to conduct research on topics where data is not obvious or not easily available. Encompasses variations in context and setting as part of data observations. Methods include interviewing protocols, interpretive methods, cluster analyses, case study methodologies, and textual analyses. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required. Same as ENVS 5740.
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3.00 Credits
Examines the writings of African American political leaders, public policy critics, and politicians who have influenced black politics and society since 1900. Explores the ideas and leadership of W.E.B. DuBois, E. Franklin Frazier, Martin Luther King Jr., and others. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Surveys historical, theoretical, and empirical analyses of violent conflict behavior, including causes and consequences of riots, terrorism, revolution, international war, and intervention. Enrollment recommended in both semesters of the two-semester sequence. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Intensive examination of pluralist, voter-centered, rational choice, and neo-Marxist literature on the American state. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Advanced seminar that examines the structure of political and economic relations in several advanced democracies. Specifically examines a series of historical, institutional, and cultural theories that purport to explain these differences. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the application and role of models in political science (domestic and international politics), in areas such as voting, committees, power, decision making, and war and peace. Models include applications of set theory, elementary probability, games, and systems analysis. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
Provides a comprehensive overview of the issues and literature concerning American "subnational" politics. Considers three bodies of literature: American federalism and intergovernmental relations, state politics, and urban/local politics. Also examines a number of policy issues. Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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3.00 Credits
A comprehensive introduction to the study of Chinese politics is provided. It begins with China's revolutionary heritage, before turning to state-society relations in China today. Concludes with China's external relations. Will China be a status quo or a revisionist power in the 21st century? Restricted to graduate students or instructor consent required.
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