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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
1 course Advanced topics in applied mathematics for physics students, including tensor analysis, special functions, partial differential equations, complex variables, integral transforms. Prerequisite: PHYS 130 and PHYS 270.
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0.50 Credits
0.5 course Students complete an individual project with the supervision of a member of the physics department faculty. Prerequisite: PHYS 280 and a senior physics major or permission of instructor.
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1.00 - 2.00 Credits
Group 2,1 course An introduction to the American political system that addresses the roles of political parties, elections, interest groups, public opinion, news media, the Constitution, and the legislative, executive and judicial branches in governing the United States.
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1.00 - 2.00 Credits
Group 2,1 course An examination of major theories of comparative politics applicable to liberal democratic, communist and developing Third World systems. Theories of modernization and development, functionalism, systems analysis, dependency and underdevelopment, political economy, state-society relations, corporatism and neo-corporatism in both Western and non-Western settings.
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1.00 Credits
1 course Advanced placement credit for entering first-year students. A. U.S. Government. B. Comparative Politics. POLS 156 cannot be counted as credit toward a POLS major.
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1.00 Credits
1 course A seminar on a theme related to political science. Open only to first-year students.
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1.00 - 2.00 Credits
Group 2,1 course The theory and especially the practice of subnational government in the U.S. Topics include intergovernmental relations; government institutions; elections, parties, and interest groups; taxing, spending and economic development activities; and policy problems besetting state and local governments and metropolitan areas.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Group 4, 1 course An introduction to the basic ideas in the history of political thought that have provided philosophical foundations of modern political life.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Group 4, 1 course A survey of contemporary worldviews based on value and belief systems that generate sets of attitudes and behaviors toward political institutions and processes. Ideologies such as enthno-nationalism, religious fundamentalism, feminism, liberation theology, globalism and environmentalism are treated.
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1.00 - 2.00 Credits
Group 2,1 course Why do the two Asian giants, India and China, with more than 38 percent of the population of the world, matter to the rest of the world at the beginning of the 21st century What are China's superpower prospects Will nuclear India attain great power status What is the future of communism and the prospect of political freedom and democracy in China Is Indian democracy stable What are the sources of instability of Indian government What does a weak central government mean to Indian federalism The dynamics of ethnic minorities in China The future of secularism in India The nuclear dynamics in Sino-Indian relations These questions and many others will be explored in this course.
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