ENROLL Course Search
Your search for courses for 22/WI and with code: CCSTREGIONAL found 3 courses.
BIOL 210.00 Global Change Biology 6 credits
Open: Size: 48, Registered: 37, Waitlist: 0
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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Environmental problems are caused by a complex mix of physical, biological, social, economic, political, and technological factors. This course explores how these environmental problems affect life on Earth by examining the biological processes underlying natural ecological systems and the effects of global environmental changes such as resources consumption and overharvesting, land-use change, climate warming, pollution, extinction and biodiversity loss, and invasive species.
Prerequisite: One introductory science lab course (Biology 125, 126, Chemistry 123, 128, Geology 110, 115 or 120)
Sophomore Priority
Waitlist for Juniors and Seniors: BIOL 210.WL0 (Synonym 62094)
HIST 137.00 Early Medieval Worlds in Transformation 6 credits
Open: Size: 30, Registered: 28, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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8:30am9:40am | 8:30am9:40am | 8:30am9:30am |
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In this course we will explore a variety of distinct but interconnected worlds that existed between ca.300 and ca.1050. We will interrogate primary sources, especially written and visual materials, as they bear witness to people forming and transforming political, social, religious, and cultural values, ideas and structures. We will work to understand how communities adapt to new conditions and challenges while maintaining links with and repurposing the lifeways, ideas, and material cultures of the past. We will watch as new and different groups and institutions come to power, and how the existing peoples and structures respond and change. Projects in this course will build capacity to interpret difficult primary documents, formulate research questions, and build arguments that combine rigor and humane sympathy.
SOAN 353.00 Ethnography of Latin America 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 6, Waitlist: 0
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8:15am10:00am | 8:15am10:00am |
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This course explores the origins and development of contemporary lived experiences in Latin America as interpreted through ethnographic works in anthropology. We will examine and analyze the structural processes that have shaped contact among indigenous, European, and non-European immigrants (e.g. African and Asian peoples) in Latin America since the Conquest and through colonial periods to understand today's Latin American societies. We will pay special attention to the impacts of global capitalist expansion and state formation, sites of resilience and resistance, as well as the movement of Latin American peoples throughout the world today. Course themes will address gender, identity, social organization, indigeneity, immigration, social inequality and environment.
Prerequisite: The department strongly recommends that Sociology/Anthropology 110 or 111 be taken prior to enrolling in courses numbered 200 or above
Not open to students who have taken SOAN 250
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