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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Adria Lawrence. t9.25-11.15 So (0) The Middle East and North Africa in comparative perspective. Evaluation of claims that the region's states are exceptionally violent, authoritarian, or religious. Themes include gender, Islam, nation and state formation, oil wealth, terrorism, and war.
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3.00 Credits
Jessica Weiss. w 7-8.50 p.m. So (0) State-society relations in the People's Republic of China. Popular protest and social mobilization, media commercialization and the Internet, and prospects for political reform and democratization.
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3.00 Credits
Ellen Lust. tth 9.25-10.15, 1 htba So (22) An overview of politics in the Middle East and North Africa, with particular attention to state formation, Islam, oil, and the Arab-Israeli conflict as they influence regime type, political stability, and economic development.
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3.00 Credits
Jessica Weiss. w 1.30-3.20 So (0) Anti-Americanism and other varieties of antiforeign sentiment in the developing world, with a focus on the international and domestic sources of anti-Americanism and implications for U.S. foreign policy.
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3.00 Credits
Harry Blair. t 1.30-3.20 So (0) Western efforts to promote democratization in developing countries in the past fifteen years through foreign aid programs. Emphasis on "applied democracy"- putting theory into action
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3.00 Credits
Matthew Kocher. m 1.30-3.20 So (0) An interdisciplinary approach to the problem of order, drawing on texts from political theory, international relations, sociology, comparative politics, history, and economics. Inquiry into both constitutive and causal questions, addressing what order is as well as what causes, sustains, and degrades it.
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3.00 Credits
Matthew Kocher. For description see under International Studies.
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3.00 Credits
Susan Stokes. th9.25-11.15 So (0) Clientelism, patronage, and vote buying. Elections and public deliberation as they shape a society's priorities for the distribution of public resources (money, goods, public employment); the diversion of resources to individuals or groups as a quid pro quo for their political support of governments or political parties.
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3.00 Credits
Sigrun Kahl. mw 2.30-3.45 So (37) Historical and comparative introduction to the relationship between religion and politics. Different approaches in Europe, the United States, and Latin America to the proper place for religion in the public sphere.
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3.00 Credits
Nicoli Nattrass. For description see under Ethics, Politics, & Economics.
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