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Course Criteria
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0.00 Credits
This course is for the ongoing work on the clinical research component of the DNP program. There is a registration fee of $250 per semester. Prerequisites: DNP 770.
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3.00 Credits
This class explores economic ideas through the effort to enhance economic growth by extending the market, and the counter movement to protect human beings, nature, and productive organizations from market forces. Extending the market involves transforming human beings, nature, and productive organization into commodities. This manifests itself in crises, inequality, environmental degradation, and so on. (WCore: WCSBS)
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1.00 Credits
General category for Special Topics in Economics, e.g., e.g., Public Finance, Multinational Corporations, Mathematical Economics. Prerequisites: ECON 253 or 263 or 105.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to the origins and evolution of theories of capitalism, empasizing growth and depression. Analyzes the nation's economy as a whole, presenting an overview of the determination of output, employment, and the price level. This course is required for all business and economics majors. Offered Fall, Spring and Summer semesters.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to microeconomics. We study how individuals, firms and governments make important decisions to get the most from a limited availability of resources. We examine how they achieve this through interactions in the markets, under perfect and imperfect competition. We explore how markets and governments complement each other.The topics include: supply and demand, elasticity, market efficiency, externalities, and market structure, etc. In this class, we frequently use algebraic and graphical analysis, in addition to qualitative analysis. As a prominent economist, John Maynard Keynes, once wrote, "The theory of economics does not furnish a body of settled conclusions immediately applicable to policy. It is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking which helps its possessor to draw correct conclusions." We expect students to learn the economic way of thinking after taking this class.
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2.00 Credits
Using both fictional and documentary films as our primary subject matter, we explore the ethical and economic aspects of the phenomenon of making money by investing money in the stock market. We will look at the history of the stock market as a prelude to engaging in close analysis of the motives of investors, the ethical and economic consequences of investing, the political dimensions of the market and the social significance of market capitalism.
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2.00 Credits
This course explores ethical, economic and legal implications of the increasing commodification of everything, including human lives, which has occurred because of the ever increasing emphasis on consumption to drive economies. We explore the malign effects that this commodification of everything stimulating increasing levels of consumption may have on our individual capabilities to live humanly decent lives, which intuitively involves more than consuming and accumulating "stuff".
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4.00 Credits
Money and banking institutions, theory of prices, and interest. Keynesian and post-Keynesian monetary theory and alternative monetary policies.
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4.00 Credits
Examines the history of economic thought in the context of the evolution of the capitalist system. The course uses original sources in understanding the classical, Marxist, neoclassical, Institutionalist, and Austrian schools of economic thought. Prerequisites: ECON 105 or ECON 253 or HON 211.
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4.00 Credits
Intermediate study of income, employment, and output; also the role of fiscal and monetary policies. The course also explores the role of fiscal and monetary policies from classical, Keynesian, post-Keynesian, and monetarist viewpoints. Prerequisites: ECON 253, 263; MATH 141.
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