PSCI010 - The Contemporary American City

Status
C
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI010 - The Contemporary American City
Term
2017C
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSCI010301
Meeting times
M 0200PM-0500PM
Meeting location
STITELER HALL B30
Instructors
HOPKINS, DANIEL
Description
Freshmen seminars are small, substantive courses taught by members of the faculty and open only to freshmen. These seminars offer an excellent opportunity to explore areas not represented in high school curricula and to establish relationships with faculty members around areas of mutual interest. See www.college.upenn.edu/admissions/freshmen.php
Course number only
010
Use local description
No

PSCI280 - FEMINIST POL. THOUGHT

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI280 - FEMINIST POL. THOUGHT
Term session
2
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
920
Section ID
PSCI280920
Meeting times
MW 0115PM-0505PM
Meeting location
STITELER HALL B30
Instructors
HANLEY, DANIELLE
Description
This course is designed to provide an overview of the variety of ideas, approaches, and subfields within feminist political thought. Readings and divided into three sections: contemporary theorizing about the meaning of "feminism";women in the history of Western political thought; and feminist theoretical approaches to practical political problems and issues, such as abortion and sexual assault.
Course number only
280
Use local description
No

PSCI232 - INTRO TO POLITICAL COMM

Status
X
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI232 - INTRO TO POLITICAL COMM
Term session
2
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
920
Section ID
PSCI232920
Meeting times
CANCELED
Instructors
FERENTINOS, LEAH
Description
This course is an introduction to the field of political communication, conceptual approaches to analyzing communication in various forms, including advertising, speech making, campaign debates, and candidates' and office-holders' uses of news. The focus of this course is on the interplay in the U.S. between television and politics. The course includes a history of televised campaign practices from the 1952 presidential contest onward.
Course number only
232
Use local description
No

PSCI181 - MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI181 - MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Term session
2
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
920
Section ID
PSCI181920
Meeting times
TR 0115PM-0505PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 321
Instructors
KIM, JUMAN
Description
This course will provide an overview of major figures and themes of modern political thought. We will focus on themes and questions pertinent to political theory in the modern era, particularly focusing on the relationship of the individual to community, society, and state. Although the emergence of the individual as a central moral, political, and conceptual category arguably began in earlier eras, it is in the seventeenth century that it takes firm hold in defining the state, political institutions, moral thinking, and social relations. The centrality of "the individual" has created difficulties, even paradoxes, for community and social relations, and political theorists have struggled to reconicle those throughout the modern era. We will consider the political forms that emerged out of those struggles, as well as the changed and distinctly "modern" conceptualizations of political theory such as freedom, responsibilty, justice, rights and obligations, as central categories for organizing moral and political life.
Course number only
181
Use local description
No

PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH

Status
X
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH
Term session
1
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
910
Section ID
PSCI180910
Meeting times
CANCELED
Instructors
KIM, JUMAN
Description
Through reading texts of Plato (Socrates), Aristotle, Augustine and Aquinas, the student encounters a range of political ideas deeply challenging to--and possibly corrosive of--today's dominant democratic liberalism. Can classical and medieval thinking offer insight into modern impasses in political morality? Is such ancient thinking plausible, useful, or dangerous?
Course number only
180
Use local description
No

PSCI150 - INTRO TO INT RELATIONS

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI150 - INTRO TO INT RELATIONS
Term session
1
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
910
Section ID
PSCI150910
Meeting times
MW 0900AM-1250PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 169
Instructors
MARGULIES, MAX
Description
This course is an introduction to the major theories and issues in international politics. The goals of the course are to give students a broad familiarity with the field of international relations, and to help them develop the analytical skills necessary to think critically about international politics. The course is divided into four parts: 1) Concepts and Theories of International Relations; 2) War and Security; 3) The Global Economy; and 4) Emerging Issues in International Relations.
Course number only
150
Use local description
No

PSCI131 - AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI131 - AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
Term session
1
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
910
Section ID
PSCI131910
Meeting times
TR 0900AM-1250PM
Instructors
MARGULIES, MAX
Description
This course analyzes the formation and conduct of foreign policy in the United State. The course combines three elements: a study of the history of American foreign relations; an analysis of the causes of American foreign policy such sa the international system, public opinion, and the media; and a discussion of the major policy issues in contemporary U.S. foreign policy, including terrorism, civil wars, and economic policy.
Course number only
131
Use local description
No

PSCI130 - INTRO TO AMER POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI130 - INTRO TO AMER POLITICS
Term session
2
Term
2017B
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
920
Section ID
PSCI130920
Meeting times
MW 0900AM-1250PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 167-8
Instructors
WOODWARD-BURNS, ROBINSON
Description
This course is intended to introduce students to the national institutions and political processes of American government. What are the historical and philosophical foundations of the American Republic? How does American public policy get made, who makes it, and who benefits? Is a constitutional fabric woven in 1787 good enough for today? How, if at all, should American government be changed, and why? What is politics and why bother to study it? If these sorts of questions interest you, then this course will be a congenial home. It is designed to explore such questions while teaching students the basics of American politics and government.
Course number only
130
Use local description
No

PSCI234 - CHANGING AMER ELECTORATE

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI234 - CHANGING AMER ELECTORATE
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
789
Section ID
PSCI234789
Description
By examining Supreme Court decisions in light of works on American history, politics, and political theory, we will explore legal, political, and philosophical debates on civil liberties today. Readings will consider litigation of the 1st, 2d, 4th, 5th, 8th, and 14th Amendments. Issues will include struggles over freedom of religion, speech, privacy, and property rights, analyzed in the context of American cultural traditions and hierarchies; and conflicts over the rights of suspects, criminals and citizens, analyzed in the context of racial and class tensions, criminial violence, and anti-terrorist security concerns.
Course number only
234
Use local description
No