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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Historical development of current budgeting practices; politics of budgetary process at federal, state, and local levels; current methods of budgeting for public agencies, focusing on integration of budgeting into program planning. Prerequisite(s): 942:014; 942:048. (Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Theories and models of policy process in the United States, including agenda setting, formulation, adoption, implementation, and evaluation. Application of theories and models to case studies of major policy issues. Prerequisite(s): 942:014; 942:048; junior standing. (Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Development of current government personnel practices; contemporary issues in personnel administration; techniques of job analysis; recruitment and selection of employees; and problems of supervision and evaluation. Prerequisite(s): 942:014; 942:048. (Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Advanced topics in public administration, such as essential and nonessential service delivery, fiscal administration, and community development. Introduces students to issues not covered in other public administration courses. Prerequisite(s): 942:048; junior standing. (Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Survey of various approaches to international relations with special emphasis on application to historical and contemporary cases. (Offered Fall and Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of how the pursuit of power and the pursuit of wealth interact in international relations. Emphasis on trade policy, monetary and financial policies, economic development, and the politics of globalization since 1945. Prerequisite(s): 943:024; junior standing. (Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Survey of the nature and causes of war, and the methods states use to achieve security. Examination of such issues as arms races, alliances, military technology, and military strategy and their relation to the politics of international relations. Analysis of methods for resolving conflicts and promoting peace. (Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of political, social, and economic disparities and mutual interdependence between developing and developed nations. Examination of need for a new international economic order, and issues of energy, food, raw materials, population, and transfer of technology. Prerequisite(s): junior standing. (Offered Even Falls)
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3.00 Credits
Examination of the origins and development of the concept of Human Rights. Review of the major challenges to global human rights, including genocide, racism, political repression, national/religion oppression, and gender discrimination. Emphasis on the international institutions, norms, and policies of states and non-state actors to define and promote human rights. (Variable)
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3.00 Credits
Historical and theoretical examination of the individual, domestic, and systemic factors which affect formulation of United States foreign policy. (Offered Spring)
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