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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Selected topics in theoretical and/or experimental physics. Choice of topics determined by needs of students and interest of instructor. Alternate years. Lecture and/or laboratory hours depend on topics. Staff
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3.00 Credits
Independent Study
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3.00 Credits
Operation of American political processes and governmental institutions. Political culture of American democracy, political philosophy of the Constitution, relationship between organization of the economy and political power, linkages between mass public and governing elites, and operation of institutions of national government. (M4) Reynolds
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3.00 Credits
Topics include world politics and your life, origins of modern world system, human rights, nationalism, terrorism, violence, modern warfare, International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Trade Organization, United Nations, international law, global ecology, and north/south confl ict. Attention to leaders of the three global blocs: United States, Germany, and Japan. Fall. (M4) Olson
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3.00 Credits
How can we ask better political questions and provide better political answers? This course introduces students to the habits of mind of famous thinkers across the centuries: Plato, Machiavelli, Shakespeare, de Tocqueville, Students for a Democratic Society, and Hannah Arendt. Topics include personal choice, democratic citizenship, justice, and totalitarianism. (M3) Haddad
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3.00 Credits
A thematic approach to the study of politics in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. It exposes students to the diversity of the modern world, teaches methods for studying other countries comparatively, and emphasizes critical analysis. Topic selection varies by semester. (M5) Fischler
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3.00 Credits
Issues of freedom of speech and expression. Supreme Court interpretations of the First Amendment, including major cases that have defi ned parameters of free speech in America. Philosophical debate about value of free expression in a democratic society. Topics include subversive speech and political dissent, protest speech, prior restraint, obscenity, libel, symbolic speech, hate speech, and provocation. May Term. Reynolds
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3.00 Credits
Special Topics
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