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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
A review of three approaches to IPE: realist, liberal, and historical-structuralist. Four areas of world economic activity: trade, investment, aid and debt, and how global changes since WWII influence development choices for less developed countries.
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3.00 Credits
History, institutions, and operation of the defense economy in the U.S. Conflicting theories on the defense budget, military contracting, and economic rationales for U.S. military policy. The economic impact of different military policies in the current era.
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3.00 Credits
International human rights issues: political, economic, social, cultural. Role of United Nations and other international organizations in forming and implementing human rights standards. Topics include women's rights, protection of minorities, and rights to economic subsistence.
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3.00 Credits
Provides an understanding of the relationship between foreign policy, news and public opinion. Analyze how political actors view and communicate with the public; and, whether and how media coverage of foreign policy serves our democracy.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces students to modern Middle East politics. To understand the political dynamic of the modern Middle East, this lecture course combines a cultural identity approach with more traditional international historical, political analyses.
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3.00 Credits
For description, see Political Science.
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3.00 Credits
The course examines the politics of North Africa (Libya, Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria, Mauritania and the Western Sahara), with particular focus on political Islam and the geostrategic nature of the region to global politics.
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3.00 Credits
Constitutional power bases of judicial, executive and legislative branches of national government, analysis of major constitutional issues, of federalism and powers of the states, Supreme Court decisions. One lower-division political science course recommended.
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3.00 Credits
Examining those portions of the Constitution dealing with relations between the individual and the government (the Bill of Rights, due process, equal protection, privileges and immunities, etc.). PO 301S is not prerequisite. One lower-division political science course recommended.
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3.00 Credits
The Presidency as a political and constitutional office, its growth and development from Washington to the present. One lower-division political science course recommended.
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