PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
206
Section ID
PSCI110206
Meeting times
F 1100AM-1200PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 6
Instructors
WELLS, EMILY
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
205
Section ID
PSCI110205
Meeting times
F 0200PM-0300PM
Meeting location
STITELER HALL B30
Instructors
WELLS, EMILY
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
204
Section ID
PSCI110204
Meeting times
R 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
CASTER BUILDING A8
Instructors
WELLS, EMILY
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
203
Section ID
PSCI110203
Meeting times
F 1100AM-1200PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 23
Instructors
JAIRAM, ANIRUDDHA
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
202
Section ID
PSCI110202
Meeting times
F 1000AM-1100AM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 843
Instructors
JAIRAM, ANIRUDDHA
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
201
Section ID
PSCI110201
Meeting times
R 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 582
Instructors
JAIRAM, ANIRUDDHA
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI110 - COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Term
2015A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
001
Section ID
PSCI110001
Meeting times
TR 0130PM-0230PM
Meeting location
COLLEGE HALL 200
Instructors
FALLETI, TULIA
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to comparative political analysis. How can the political behavior, circumstances, institutions, and dynamic patterns of change that people experience in very different societies be analyzed using the same set of concepts and theories? Key themes include nationalism, political culture, democratization, authoritarianism, and the nature of protracted conflict.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

PSCI298 - HISTORY OF CURRENT SPAIN

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI298 - HISTORY OF CURRENT SPAIN
Term
2014A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
065
Section ID
PSCI298065
Description
Consult department for detailed descriptions. More than one course may be taken in a given semester. Recent titles have included: Leadership & Democracy; Conservative Regimes.
Course number only
298
Use local description
No

PSCI181 - TOPICS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF POLITICS: PLATO TO ROUSSEAU

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI181 - TOPICS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF POLITICS: PLATO TO ROUSSEAU
Term
2014A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
050
Section ID
PSCI181050
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

PSCI298 - THE ARAB SPRING

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI298 - THE ARAB SPRING
Term
2014A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
064
Section ID
PSCI298064
Description
Consult department for detailed descriptions. More than one course may be taken in a given semester. Recent titles have included: Leadership & Democracy; Conservative Regimes.
Course number only
298
Use local description
No