PSCI1404 - American Foreign Policy

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
4
Title (text only)
American Foreign Policy
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
004
Section ID
PSCI1404004
Course number integer
1404
Meeting times
W 3:30 PM-4:29 PM
Meeting location
WILL 5
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Edward Skipton
Robert Vitalis
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
1404
Use local description
No

PSCI1404 - American Foreign Policy

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
2
Title (text only)
American Foreign Policy
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
002
Section ID
PSCI1404002
Course number integer
1404
Meeting times
T 12:00 PM-12:59 PM
Meeting location
PCPE 202
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Edward Skipton
Robert Vitalis
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
1404
Use local description
No

PSCI1404 - American Foreign Policy

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
American Foreign Policy
Term
2023A
Syllabus URL
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
001
Section ID
PSCI1404001
Course number integer
1404
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:14 AM
Meeting location
PCPE 200
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Robert Vitalis
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
1404
Use local description
No

PSCI1404 - American Foreign Policy

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
3
Title (text only)
American Foreign Policy
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
003
Section ID
PSCI1404003
Course number integer
1404
Meeting times
T 1:45 PM-2:44 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 4N30
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Edward Skipton
Robert Vitalis
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
1404
Use local description
No

PSCI1600 - Contemporary Political Thought

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
Contemporary Political Thought
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
001
Section ID
PSCI1600001
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
TR 10:15 AM-11:14 AM
Meeting location
PCPE 200
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Roxanne L Euben
Description
This course is intended as a general introduction to political theory since 1900. The theme for the Spring 2023 will be: Power and Politics, and the theorists examined will include Hannah Arendt, bell hooks, Michel Foucault, Bertrand de Jouvenel, and James C. Scott. Questions include: What is political power? How has it been exercised and by whom? Who should have power? Are power and violence inescapably intertwined? Do those without conventional political power understand and exercise power differently from those who traditionally wield it? How have technologies of surveillance and control by medical, psychiatric, computer and security experts altered where power is and how it operates?
Course number only
1600
Use local description
No

PSCI1600 - Contemporary Political Thought

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
3
Title (text only)
Contemporary Political Thought
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
003
Section ID
PSCI1600003
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
T 3:30 PM-4:29 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 3W2
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Roxanne L Euben
Clancy Murray
Description
This course is intended as a general introduction to political theory since 1900. The theme for the Spring 2023 will be: Power and Politics, and the theorists examined will include Hannah Arendt, bell hooks, Michel Foucault, Bertrand de Jouvenel, and James C. Scott. Questions include: What is political power? How has it been exercised and by whom? Who should have power? Are power and violence inescapably intertwined? Do those without conventional political power understand and exercise power differently from those who traditionally wield it? How have technologies of surveillance and control by medical, psychiatric, computer and security experts altered where power is and how it operates?
Course number only
1600
Use local description
No

PSCI1600 - Contemporary Political Thought

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
4
Title (text only)
Contemporary Political Thought
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
004
Section ID
PSCI1600004
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
W 12:00 PM-12:59 PM
Meeting location
PCPE 225
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Roxanne L Euben
Clancy Murray
Description
This course is intended as a general introduction to political theory since 1900. The theme for the Spring 2023 will be: Power and Politics, and the theorists examined will include Hannah Arendt, bell hooks, Michel Foucault, Bertrand de Jouvenel, and James C. Scott. Questions include: What is political power? How has it been exercised and by whom? Who should have power? Are power and violence inescapably intertwined? Do those without conventional political power understand and exercise power differently from those who traditionally wield it? How have technologies of surveillance and control by medical, psychiatric, computer and security experts altered where power is and how it operates?
Course number only
1600
Use local description
No

PSCI1600 - Contemporary Political Thought

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
2
Title (text only)
Contemporary Political Thought
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
002
Section ID
PSCI1600002
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
T 12:00 PM-12:59 PM
Meeting location
PCPE 203
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Roxanne L Euben
Clancy Murray
Description
This course is intended as a general introduction to political theory since 1900. The theme for the Spring 2023 will be: Power and Politics, and the theorists examined will include Hannah Arendt, bell hooks, Michel Foucault, Bertrand de Jouvenel, and James C. Scott. Questions include: What is political power? How has it been exercised and by whom? Who should have power? Are power and violence inescapably intertwined? Do those without conventional political power understand and exercise power differently from those who traditionally wield it? How have technologies of surveillance and control by medical, psychiatric, computer and security experts altered where power is and how it operates?
Course number only
1600
Use local description
No

PSCI1103 - Dilemmas of Immigration

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Dilemmas of Immigration
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSCI1103401
Course number integer
1103
Meeting times
TR 3:30 PM-4:59 PM
Meeting location
MCNB 395
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Michael A Jones-Correa
Description
Beneath the daily headlines about refugees blocked entry, and undocumented migrants deported there is a set of hard questions which deserve closer attention: Should countries have borders? If countries have borders, how should they decide who is kept out and who is allowed in? How many immigrants is 'enough'? Are immigrants equally desirable? What kinds of obligations do immigrants have to their receiving society? What kinds of obligations do host societies have to immigrants? Should there be 'pathways' to citizenship? Can citizenship be earned? Should citizenship be automatic? This course explores these and other dilemmas raised by immigration.
Course number only
1103
Cross listings
LALS1103401
Use local description
No

PSCI0601 - Modern Political Thought

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
8
Title (text only)
Modern Political Thought
Term
2023A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
008
Section ID
PSCI0601008
Course number integer
601
Meeting times
F 10:15 AM-11:14 AM
Meeting location
WILL 214
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Loren C Goldman
Thomas Owings
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
0601
Fulfills
History & Tradition Sector
Use local description
No