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Political Science 367: Comparative Political Economy
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
This course takes a state-level and regional approach to international, political-economic interactions and addresses traditional comparative economic topics, such as state-level development strategies, institutions, and political culture. The course has a focus on the politics of regional economic integration. Specific and comparative attention is given to the European Union (EU), the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and other regional economic integration efforts. (Credit, full course.) (W) Staff
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Political Science 367 - Comparative Political Economy
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Political Science 368: Arms Control and International Security
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
Students in this course examine such problems as disarmament, arms control, conventional arms transfers, and nuclear proliferation. Particular attention is given to the diplomacy of attempting to reach agreements and to the relationship between arms control and international security. (Credit, full course.) (W) Staff
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Political Science 368 - Arms Control and International Security
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Political Science 370: International Law in International Relations
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
The sources, subjects, and major principles of international law. The function of law in the international community. (Credit, full course.) (W) Staff
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Political Science 370 - International Law in International Relations
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Political Science 373: African-American Political Thought
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
This course focuses on important African-American writers whose unique perspectives challenge us to think about questions of justice, equality and difference, morality, and rule. Readings begin in the nineteenth century (Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington) and proceed into the late twentieth century with selections from authors such as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, James Baldwin, Shelby Steele, Cornel West, and Toni Morrison. (Credit, full course.) (T) McKeen
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Political Science 373 - African-American Political Thought
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Political Science 381: The Political Economy of Sustainable Development
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
This course examines the different configurations of market, state, and cultural forces presented by societies as they respond to the challenges associated with attempting to meet present needs and demands without compromising their natural and social base for meeting the needs of the future. Theoretical discussions are combined with case studies. Course is identical to Political Science 461 with the exception that special attention is given to research in 461. Students taking this course may not take Political Science 461. (Credit, full course.) (A, C) Brockett
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Political Science 381 - The Political Economy of Sustainable Development
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Political Science 390: The United Nations
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
The nature, organization, and function of the United Nations in a changing world environment. An emphasis on the U.N.'s work on peace as well as social, economic, and humanitarian issues. (Credit, full course.) (W) Dunn
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Political Science 390 - The United Nations
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Political Science 396: The Origins and Conduct of the First World War,1900-1919
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
This course examines the problem of how and why Europe went to war in 1914, then comments on the conduct of the war itself and the peacemaking that followed. Attention is on the following topics: operation of the alliance and entente systems, impact of intelligence operations on foreign policy, domestic organization of the European powers, relationship between strategic planning and decision making, and the role of ideas in modeling approaches to international politics. The fortunes and misfortunes of eastern Europe and especially Austria-Hungary receive special emphasis. (Credit, full course.) Staff
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Political Science 396 - The Origins and Conduct of the First World War,1900-1919
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Political Science 402: Topics in Political Economy
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
Globalization is a term that social scientists have used to explain everything from trade and investment patterns to changes in popular culture such as the introduction of McDonald? and Mickey Mouse throughout the world. At root, globalization points to a pattern of institutional change wrought by close interaction of economies. Students read works that clarify what is meant by the term globalization and how globalization is affecting the following three areas related to political economy: trade and investment, welfare institutions, and rule of law. (Credit, full course.) (C, W) Wilson
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Political Science 402 - Topics in Political Economy
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Political Science 404: Race,Politics,and Empire
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
This course examines eighteenth- and nineteenth-century philosophies of race in the context of the political history of empire as well as twentieth-century post-colonial challenges to those philosophies and practices. (Credit, full course.) (T) McKeen
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Political Science 404 - Race,Politics,and Empire
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Political Science 406: Jurisprudence
3.00 Credits
Sewanee-The University of the South
A study of the philosophy and development of law through the centuries. Particular emphasis is on law in the classical period as well as the more modern historical, analytical, and sociological schools of jurisprudence. (Credit, full course.) (L) Pearigen
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Political Science 406 - Jurisprudence
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