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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: HIST113 or HIST240; or permission of instructor. Germany's aims and policies during World War I, its condition and policies in the inter-war period, the rise of National Socialism, World War II, and post-war Germany.
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3.00 Credits
Russia and the Soviet Union from the fall of the tsars to the post- communist present. Impact of Leninism, Stalinism and Soviet Communism on state, society, culture and nationality.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: HIST113 or HIST240; or permission of instructor. A political, socioeconomic, and cultural history of Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, and Albania from the breakdown of Ottoman domination to the present. Emphasis is on movements for national liberation during the 19th-century and on approaches to modernization in the 20th-century.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: HIST156, HIST210, HIST213, HIST222, HIST254, HIST265, HIST275, or ECON311; or permission of instructor. The development of the American economy from Columbus through the Civil War.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: HIST157, HIST211, HIST213, HIST222, HIST255, HIST265, or HIST275; or permission of instructor. The evolution of the U.S. economy from the end of the Civil War to the present; emphasis on macroeconomic policy making and relations among business, government and organized labor.
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3.00 Credits
American foreign relations from the American Revolution to the beginning of World War I. International developments and domestic influences that contributed to American expansion in world affairs. Analyses of significant individuals active in American diplomacy and foreign policy.
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3.00 Credits
American foreign relations in the 20th-century. World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, the Korean War, and Vietnam. A continuation of HIST452.
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3.00 Credits
to 1860 The interaction of government, law, and politics in the constitutional system. The nature and purpose of constitutions and constitutionalism; the relationship between the constitution and social forces and influences, the way in which constitutional principles, rules, ideas, and institutions affect events and are in turn affected by events. The origins of American politics and constitutionalism through the constitutional convention of 1787. Major constitutional problems such as the origins of judicial review, democratization of government, slavery in the territories and political system as a whole.
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3.00 Credits
American public law and government, with emphasis on the interaction of government, law, and politics. Emphasis on the political-constitutional system as a whole, rather than simply the development of constitutional law by the Supreme Court. Major crises in American government and politics such as Civil War, Reconstruction, the 1890s, the New Deal era, the civil disorders of the 1960s.
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3.00 Credits
The culture and ideas that have shaped American society and character from the first settlements to the Civil War.
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