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POLS W3595: Social Protection Around the World
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
No course description available.
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POLS W3616: Global Order: Civilizations & Society in International Relations
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Global Order: Civilizations; Society in International Relations "Global Order" is a course designed to help students make sense of one of the fundamental questions we can ask about international relations and politics in general: how is order established, maintained, or destroyed? In an important sense, order is what the "study of politics seeks to discern and the practice of politics seeks to achieve" (Zartman 2009: 3). A focus on order in world politics can help us answer several interesting questions: Are we seeing the modern era of world politics ending and a new postmodern era beginning? What do these changes mean for the current period of American international political dominance?
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POLS W3619: Nationalism and Contemporary World Politics
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Nationalism as a cause of conflict in contemporary world politics. Strategies for mitigating nationalist and ethnic conflict.
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POLS W3626: Gender & International Relations
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Gender & International Relations This course is designed as a comprehensive introduction to a way of analyzing and researching global politics and international relations that takes gender seriously as a category of analysis. The course is particularly concerned with the ways in which gender is implicated in the construction of international relations, how this impacts the foreign policies of states, and what this means for the actions of other actors in world politics, such as non- governmental organizations (NGOs), international organizations (IOs), and social movements.
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POLS W3631: American Foreign Policy
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Introduction to American foreign policy since 1945 with an emphasis on post-cold war topics. Will cover major schools of American thought, the policy making process, and key policies and issues.
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POLS W3659: International Cooperation & Institutions
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
International Cooperation & Institutions Why do governments and leaders cooperate? What is the role of international institutions in world politics? This course is an introduction to the systematic study of international cooperation and institutions. The course emphasizes recent empirical and theoretical research across issue areas.
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POLS W3704: Data Analysis & Statistics for Political Science Research
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Data Analysis & Statistics for Political Science Research This course examines the basic methods data analysis and statistics that political scientists use in quantitative research that attempts to make causal inferences about how the political world works. The same methods apply to other kinds of problems about cause and effect relationships more generally. The course will provide students with extensive experience in analyzing data and in writing (and thus reading) research papers about testable theories and hypotheses. It will cover basic data analysis and statistical methods, from univariate and bivariate descriptive and inferential statistics through multivariate regression analysis. Computer applications will be emphasized. The course will focus largely on observational data used in cross-sectional statistical analysis, but it will consider issues of research design more broadly as well. It will assume that students have no mathematical background beyond high school algebra and no experience using computers for data analysis.
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POLS W3708: Empirical Research Methods
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Prerequisites: his course is intended for political science majors, and some exposure to political science is assumed. Familiarity with statistical software is helpful but not required. Students will be working with data in class throughout the term. This course provides an introduction to selected research methods that are widely used in political science. The aim of the course is to familiarize students with the conceptual and methodological challenges that arise when researchers attempt to measure political phenomena, assess change over time, or demonstrate a causal relationship between policies and social outcomes. In order to reinforce core ideas and link them to ongoing political debates, students will conduct a series of small research projects that will involve statistical software, sampling, questionnaire development, and experimental design.
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POLS W3720: Scope & Methods
3.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Methods Why do citizens vote? Do Get-Out-the-Vote campaigns work to increase turnout? Does campaign spending increase the likelihood of electoral success? How do electoral rules aff ect the political representation of the poor? What determines the success of ethnic insurgencies? Why do some civil wars last longer than others? Do international laws protect civilians during military conflict? How we go about answering these questions (and other important questions about politics and our world) determines the quality of our answers. This course is about evaluating the quality of answers to political and social science research questions, and introduces fundamental topics in research design, choice of method, and data analysis. Although the material introduces concepts that are relevant to both quantitative and qualitative research methods, this course emphasizes quantitative research and provides an introduction to basic statistical analysis. At the successful completion of the course, students will be well-prepared to conduct independent research, including senior honor theses.
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POLS W3911: Seminar in Political Theory
4.00 Credits
Columbia University in the City of New York
Prerequisites: Instructor's permission is required to register. Pre-registration is not permitted. Please see here for detailed seminar registration guidelines: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/polisci/undergrad/main/SeminarGuidelines/index.html Seminar in Political Theory
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