ENROLL Course Search
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Your search for courses for 20/SP and with code: POSCADVSEM found 4 courses.
POSC 302.00 Subordinated Politics and Intergroup Relations* 6 credits, S/CR/NC only
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 11, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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How do social and political groups interact? How do we understand these interactions in relation to power? This course will introduce the basic approaches and debates in the study of prejudice, racial attitudes, and intergroup relations. We will focus on three main questions. First, how do we understand and study prejudice and racism as they relate to U.S. politics? Second, how do group identities, stereotyping, and other factors help us understand the legitimation of discrimination, group hierarchy, and social domination? Third, what are the political and social challenges associated with reducing prejudice?
POSC 324.00 Rebels and Risk Takers: Women and War in the Middle East* 6 credits, S/CR/NC only
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 15, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:50pm3:35pm | 1:50pm3:35pm |
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How are women (and gender more broadly) shaping and shaped by war and conflict in the Middle East? Far from the trope of the subjugated, veiled, and abused Middle Eastern woman, women in the Middle East are active social and political agents. In wars and conflicts in the Middle East region, women have, for example, been combatants, soldiers, activists, spies, homemakers, writers, and political leaders. This course surveys conflicts involving Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Israel, Jordan, and Iraq--along with Western powers like the U.S., UK, and Australia--through the wartime experiences of women.
POSC 348.00 Strangers, Foreigners and Exiles* 6 credits, S/CR/NC only
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 17, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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POSC 350.00 "A Savage Made to Inhabit Cities": The Political Philosophy of Rousseau 6 credits, S/CR/NC only
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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Cross-listed with Political Science 260. In this course we will study what Rousseau considered his greatest and best book: Emile. Emile is a philosophic novel. It uses a thought experiment–the rearing of a child from infancy to adulthood–to explore human nature and the human condition, including their political dimensions. Among Emile‘s themes are natural goodness and the origins of evil; self-love and sociability; the differences and relations between the sexes; citizenship; and the principles of political right. The book also addresses the question of how one might live naturally and happily amid an unnatural and unhappy civilization.
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