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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
An examination of the institutions that shape the course of people's lives from birth to death. Topics include primary socialization, family, schools, peer groups, occupations, retirement, and death. (3-0) R
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3.00 Credits
Trends in family life are examined with special attention to how these relate to changes in men's and women's roles. Topics include sex-role socialization, division of labor in the household, sexuality,emotional aspects of marriage, marital power and decision making, and divorce. (3-0) R
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3.00 Credits
Examines female and male gender roles in both historic and contemporary contexts. Topics may include the sex/gender distinction, gender socialization, masculinities, the sexual division of labor, gender and power, and the interaction of gender with race, class, and sexuality. (3-0) R
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3.00 Credits
Examines how laws and legal institutions reflect and reproduce cultural notions of gender. Focuses on how legal equality and sex discrimination have been defined and challenged. Topics include rape law, reproductive issues, marriage and divorce, pornography, workplace regulations, and, generally, how gender and race ideologies interact in legal decision making. (Same as PSCI 3353) (3-0) R
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3.00 Credits
Addresses the influence of gender on the distribution of public goods and the way gender, interacting with race and class, shapes social, political, and economic institutions. Introduces students to traditional notions of rights and citizenship as conceptual underpinnings for contemporary political and legal debates (on welfare, reproductive rights, childcare, job segregation, women in the military, prostitution). (Same as PSCI 3354 and GST 3303) (3-0) T
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3.00 Credits
Examines the spatial dimensions of health, disease, and the public health and health care systems. Provides an introduction to spatial epidemiology and a bridge to the terminology of medical and health care professionals. (Same as GEOG 3357). (3-0) Y
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the key measures, data sources, concepts and theories to document and understand the variation of fertility and mortality, interregional migration, population distributions and their compositions in space and time. Historic, present and future population trends are discussed and analyzed in relation to biological principles and environmental challenges as well as diverging societal organizations and economic constraints. (Same as GEOG 3358). (3-0) Y
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3.00 Credits
Study of the forms, meanings, measurements, costs, and explanations for crime. Analysis of criminal justice policy, including issues of social control, deterrence, punishment, rehabilitation, danger, and justice. Prerequisite: CRIM 3302 or CRIM 3303. (Same as CRIM 3311) (3-0) T
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3.00 Credits
Study of the social phenomenon of juvenile delinquency and state supervision of youths. The causes of delinquency and the social and legal agencies established to deal with it. (Same as CRIM 3310) (3-0) R
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3.00 Credits
Examines the relations between population, development, and the environment. Essential components of demographic analysis lay the foundation for a critical evaluation of demographic transition theory. Other topics include public health, population structure and life chances, cultural differences and women's status, aging, environmental impacts and population policy. (Same as ECON 3372 and GEOG 3372) (3-0) T
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