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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Irr.; 3 cr (S-A). Structure and characteristics of rural societies in different countries, problems of change and adjustment to an industrial economy. P: Jr st & intro course in soc or anthro.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-A). Modern attitudes and controversies; the role of the community, groups and agencies in social action and in social change. P: Jr st or cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
Irr.; 3 cr (S-A). Topics include: Marxism and feminism; race and class; alternative theories of history; methodological issues in contemporary Marxism. P: Soc 621 or cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-A). Examines the relationship between the social structures of gender (e.g., the domestic division of labor, sex-segregated occupational structures, gender ideologies, the social organization of sexuality) and political institutions, political activities, and state policies. P: Jr st.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-D). Review of problems and prospects of so-called "developing societies." Includes theory of economic/social development, political economic organizations of "developing" societies, history of colonialism/imperialism, attempts to industrialize and results of those attempts. P: Jr st.
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3.00 Credits
Irr.; 3 cr (e-S-D). Analysis of the social, economic, political, and legal status of American Indians in modern U.S. society, with emphasis on the emergence of tribal sovereignty, American Indian ethnic identity, pan-Indianism, and the special social/and economic problems faced by American Indians. P: Jr st, intro crse in sociology or cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-A). Intensive study of selected aspects of American society viewed from the sociological perspective in a community context. P: Jr st or cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-D). Introduction to sociology of agriculture in advanced industrial-capitalist societies, including theoretical, historical, and empirical issues of agriculture in the United States. P: Jr st, intro course in sociology, or cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-A). The course explores the core problem of economic sociology: The way in which instrumental economic action is embedded in, destructive of, and facilitated, conditioned, modified, and impeded by social structures, commitments, and values. P: Sr st & cons inst.
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3.00 Credits
I or II; 3 cr (S-A). Sociological perspectives on the organization of the firm, financial markets, and work, intermediate associations (unions, ethnic economies), the state, and the international economy. Contrast between neoclassical, traditional institutionalist, post-fordist, and neo-fordist perspectives on the nature and evolution of these institutions. P: Sr st & cons inst.
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