POLITICAL SCIENCE
- POL SC-> POL SC 2: Comparative Government and PoliticsThis course surveys the scope and methods of comparative political analysis. It examines democratic, authoritarian, and transitional political systems to illustrate the central theories and ideas in comparative politics. It compares the political structures, processes, and cultures of countries at different levels of economic and social development in several world regions (e.g. Central and Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, Central, South and East Asia, and Western and Central Europe).
- POL SC-> POL SC 1: American and California PoliticsThis course surveys and analyzes the principles, institutions, policies, and politics of U.S. National and California State Governments. Students will use course concepts to situate themselves as citizens and political agents.
- POL SC-> POL SC 5: International Political Economy: Introduction to Global StudiesThis course offers an interdisciplinary introduction to the fields of Global Studies and International Political Economy. Students will analyze critically the role of national governments, international organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and multinational corporations, in regard to phenomena such as, international markets and production regimes, monetary and trade policy, international and global conflict, and environmental degradation. Contending theoretical and ideological perspectives regarding international systems, processes, and trends will be applied and evaluated. POL SC 5 is the same course as ECON 5 and GLOBAL 5. Students may earn credit for one course.
- POL SC-> POL SC 7: International PoliticsThis course examines the structure and operation of the international system. Emphasis is placed on the nature and sources of conflict and cooperation and issues of war and peace among states in the international system.
- POL SC-> POL SC 24: Introduction to LawThis course is an introduction to the legal concepts and contemporary legal conflicts in the United States, including the philosophical and historical basis for resolution of conflict. Historical and contemporary conflicts in the areas of civil liberties and civil rights, as well as other current legal conflicts and controversies are addressed. This course satisfies a requirement for the Law Pathway program.
- POL SC-> POL SC 31: Introduction to Public PolicyThis course is an introduction to public policy. The course covers core topics in American public policy and focuses on institutions, policy actors, and major theoretical models. In addition, the course covers the nature and practice of policy analysis in order to demonstrate how to employ evaluative criteria in substantive policy areas.
- POL SC-> POL SC 51: Political PhilosophyIn this inter-disciplinary course students examine fundamental ideas about politics in the writings of major Western philosophers from the ancient to the contemporary period, and use those ideas to consider and debate current political issues. POL SC 51 is the same course as PHILOS 51. Students may earn credit for one, but not both.
- POL SC-> POL SC 52: Contemporary Political ThoughtThis interdisciplinary course in philosophy and political science examines arguments and discourses developed within contemporary political thought. How those discourses critique and/or are rooted in modern ideologies, such as liberalism and socialism will be considered. The theoretical perspectives presented in the course will be used to critically examine important issues in contemporary politics. Students will situate themselves as citizens and political agents in relation to those issues. POL SC 52 is the same course as PHILOS 52. Students may earn credit for one, but not both.
- POL SC-> POL SC 88A: Independent Studies in Political SciencePlease see Independent Studies section.
- POL SC-> POL SC 88B: Independent Studies in Political SciencePlease see Independent Studies section.
- POL SC-> POL SC 95: Public Policy - Experiential LearningThis course builds upon the content of Political Science 31, Introduction to Public Policy, to provide the student with field experience in the discipline. This course addresses the theoretical underpinnings of democratic civic engagement and is a practicum in public policy in a local setting. In this hands-on course, the student will engage in experiential learning through various governmental and nongovernmental agencies which have a role in developing and/or implementing public policy. The student will develop a reading list, customized to the focus of his/her particular agency, and complete a minimum of 30 hours of volunteer work with that agency. The course exposes the student to organized, meaningful public policy research and implementation in substantive policy arenas and will be supervised in his/her off-campus experiential learning project pertaining to the development of public policy. This course is graded on a P/NP basis only.
- POL SC-> POLS C1000: American Government and PoliticsThis course is an introduction to government and politics in the United States and California. Students examine the constitutions, structure, and operation of governing institutions, civil liberties and civil rights, political behaviors, political issues, and public policy using political science theory and methodology.