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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course will examine conventional modes of political participation such as voting, running for office, participation in interest groups and less conventional modes such as demonstrations, protests, civil disobedience and revolutionary activity.(alternate years)
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3.00 Credits
This course explores the origins, growth, present condition and future direction of urban policymaking in the United States. Key actors in the process of making urban public policy and delivering local services are analyzed. In addition, current urban political problems are examined. These include such issues as poverty, housing, racial politics and national urban policy.(alternate years)
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3.00 Credits
This course examines and compares the political cultures, institutions, processes and organizations of developing states, such as, but not limited to, Brazil, Egypt, India, Mexico, and Nigeria. In addition, it explores the developing world's relationship to the developed world.(alternate years)
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3.00 Credits
An overview of significant issues of Middle East history and politics including Islam and Islamic fundamentalism, the Ottoman presence, World War I in the Middle East, Modern State System, Arab-Israeli Conflict, petroleum and oil prices, regional wars and instability, American and European interest in the Middle East, and position of women in Middle East societies. Co-listed as HIST 349/549. (occasionally)
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0.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
The course examines various aspects of criminal justice policy, including: the context within which crime occurs; the many political influences on the policy process; important historical changes in criminal justice policy; the major governmental institutions in the criminal justice system; and the effects of criminal justice policies. (SS)
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3.00 Credits
This course surveys the postwar events, controversies, and most recent challenges in U.S. foreign policy. It also analyzes the major sources of U.S. foreign policy such as ideology, national interests, and national power. Further, it examines the pattern and process of American foreign policy making.(alternate years)
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3.00 Credits
This course presents an analysis of United States foreign policy from 1776 to the present. The emphasis is upon expansion, both continental and commercial. Co-listed as HIST 367/567. (Sp, alternate years)
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1.00 Credits
This course examines the history and structure of the United Nations. It explores the key issues the organization and its member states confront, using lecture, discussions, and simulations. Each student selects a country, researches its political institutions and the international issues it faces, and represents the country before mock institutions of the United Nations. This course may be repeated for a maximum of three credits.(Sp)
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3.00 - 6.00 Credits
The research component of the Semester Abroad program. A semester of directed research in a European country. Taken in conjunction with International Studies 377/577. Prerequisites: participation in the Spring Semester Abroad orientation seminar; 2.25 GPA; junior or senior standing.(F)
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