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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
examines the transformation of Argentina from colony to modern nation, and investigates such topics as caudillismo, federalism, populism, military government, and democratization.
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3.00 Credits
surveys the history of Africa with emphasis on sub-Saharan Africa in the period after 1800. Topics include state formation, African systems of belief, colonialism and its legacy, labor, migration, and the struggle against Apartheid in South Africa.
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3.00 Credits
studies Protestantism, Catholicism, Judaism, and other religious movements. It examines the development and interaction of religion with other aspects of culture in the United States. See listing Religion 368.
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3.00 Credits
examines societies and people of West Africa, Western Europe, and Eastern North America as they came together in the region and created a new world in the 17th and 18th centuries. Special emphasis is placed on social differences (ways of getting a living, women's roles, and gendered division of labor and family structure) and their role in the ensuing conflicts and accommodations. Prerequisite: 211
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3.00 Credits
analyzes the political evolution of the new nation under the Constitution, its struggle to preserve independence from foreign powers, economic and social development, and the rise of sectional discord and civil war. Prerequisite: 211
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3.00 Credits
is a survey of the economic, cultural, political, and social history of Ohio, from prehistoric time to the present.
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3.00 Credits
examines issues, events, and policies in United States history from an economic perspective, using the basic tools of economics to gain increased understanding of such topics as: forces causing growth in the standard of living, the Great Depression, slavery, land policy, and the nature of technological change. Prerequisites: Economics 215, 216. See listing under Economics 375.
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3.00 Credits
traces the origins of American foreign policy with emphasis on the period since 1890. Conflicts over issues of imperialism, collective security, isolationism, neutrality, and the Russian- American rivalry from the Cold War to the present are explored.
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3.00 Credits
explores the history of environmental politics in the United States by examining several case studies in contemporary policy from a historical perspective. Special emphasis is placed upon the skills of using historical evidence as a component of policy analysis. See listing under Political Science 327.
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3.00 Credits
focuses upon sectional reunification and reconstruction after the Civil War, Gilded Age society, and politics and the emergence of the United States as an industrial global power. Prerequisite: 212
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