| UNDERGRADUATE
GRADUATE
COURSES
Students are eligible to take advanced courses after
6 hours of introductory work.
Prerequisites: PSCI 1040 and 1050 are prerequisite to
advanced courses in American government and politics,
public law, public policy, and international relations
(See Fields A, B, D and F in departmental copy). Three
hours of political science are prerequisite to advanced
courses in political theory and methodology and comparative
government and politics (See Fields C and E in departmental
copy).
1040-1050-1060. American Government.
3 hours each. PSCI 1040 must be taken to satisfy the requirement
of a course emphasizing U.S. and Texas constitutions.
PSCI 1050 or PSCI 1060 fulfills the remaining 3 hours
of the legislative requirement for 6 hours of government.
1040 (GOVT 2301). American Government: Laws and
Institutions. U.S. and Texas constitutions, federalism,
local government, institutions, civil rights and civil
liberties. Satisfies legislative requirement of a course
emphasizing U.S. and Texas constitutions.
1050 (GOVT 2302). American Government: Process
and Policies. Political parties, elections, interest
groups, mass media, public opinion and public policy.
1060. American Government: Topics. Individually
or team-taught courses that explore in depth a substantive
aspect of American government or politics. Topics vary
and may include (but are not limited to) specific contemporary
public issues, institutional simulations, and politics
through the arts and literature. May be repeated for credit
as topics vary. May be used for duplication only when
topic is the same.
1041-1051. Honors American Government.
3 hours each. Fulfills legislative requirement of 6 hours
of American government for students in the University
Honors Program; 1041 satisfies the requirement of a course
emphasizing U.S. and Texas constitutions.
1041. Constitutions of the United States
and Texas, federalism and political processes.
Prerequisite(s): acceptance to University Honors Program.
1051. Organization, powers, processes
and functions of national and state governments. Prerequisite(s):
PSCI 1041 and acceptance to University Honors Program.
1085. The American Political and Economic Experience.
3 hours. Study of the organization, powers, processes
and functions of institutions of national and state governments;
civil liberties and civil rights; and public policy. Integrated
into each political science topic are topics of macroeconomics,
which are discussed in the context of American government.
Includes principles of economic organization and growth
in modern economies; decision-making that affects economic
policy and activities, including official appointments
to the Federal Reserve; economic issues, including money
and banking and monetary and fiscal policy; and discussion
of income and business cycles as they relate to various
areas, including education, social welfare, and environmental
policy. Prerequisite(s): acceptance into the University
Honors Program. May be substituted for PSCI 1050/1051
and ECON 1110. Fulfills 3 hours of the legislative requirement
of 6 hours of American government.
2300. The Study of Politics. 4 hours.
Concepts, principles and practices of politics. A survey
of major topics and issues in political science. Prerequisite(s):
PSCI 1040 or PSCI 1050/1060, or consent of department.
2900. Special Problems. 1-3 hours.
3010. American State and Local Government.
3 hours. Political processes among state and local governments,
and similarities and variations in the politics and policies
of states.
3100. Topics in American Government.
3 hours. Major areas of research and controversy in American
politics. Representative topics include political campaigning,
minority group politics, and science fiction and politics.
May be repeated for credit as topics vary.
3120. Women and Politics. 3 hours. Explores
aspects of women’s political, legal and economic
lives in which gender intersects with government; provides
overview of issues and important concepts, events and
movements concerning them. Satisfies the Social and Behavioral
Sciences requirement of the University Core Curriculum.
3110. The Legislative Process. 3 hours.
Legislative behavior, representation, selection of legislators,
organization and procedures; relationships to other branches
of government.
3130. Interest Groups. 3 hours. The
theory, development, types, operations and effectiveness
of interest groups in American politics.
3160. Mass Media in American Politics.
3 hours. Mass media’s impact upon the political
process, institutions and the individual.
3200. The American Legal System. 3 hours.
Institutions and processes; courts and judicial behavior.
3210. The U.S. Supreme Court. 3 hours.
Explores varying aspects of the U.S. Supreme Court, including
how the Supreme Court selects and decides cases, how justices
are appointed to the Supreme Court, how the Supreme Court
interacts with other branches of government and interest
groups, and how decisions are implemented.
3300. Introduction to Political Research.
3 hours. Emphasizes the conceptual and analytical tools
necessary for conducting and understanding research in
political science. Includes an introduction to statistical
analysis and computer use. Prerequisite(s): PSCI 2300.
3310. Political Theory: Socrates to
the Eighteenth Century. 3 hours. Political philosophy
of Western civilization from early to modern times; works
of Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes and others. Satisfies
the Social and Behavioral Sciences requirement of the
University Core Curriculum.
3320. Political Theory: Eighteenth Century
to the Present. 3 hours. Political thought since the 18th
century; Locke and Rousseau; liberalism and conservatism;
doctrines of Western democracy; Marxist communism and
socialism; 20th-century nationalism. Satisfies the Social
and Behavioral Sciences requirement of the University
Core Curriculum.
3420. Bureaucracy and Public Policy.
3 hours. A study of the nature of bureaucracy, its role
in policy development and the problem of bureaucratic
responsibility. (Same as PADM 3420.)
3500. Introduction to Peace Studies.
3 hours. Origins and extent of violence in human relations,
foreign and domestic. Satisfies the Cross-cultural and
Global Studies requirement of the University Core Curriculum.
3600. Comparative Politics. 3 hours.
Major concepts and approaches to comparative government
and politics.
3700. Area Politics. 3 hours. Political
institutions, processes, problems and policies in distinctive
geographic or cultural areas of the world. Frequently
offered areas include Africa, Asia, Latin America, the
Middle East, the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe,
Western Europe, the Anglo-American democracies, and the
Commonwealth of Nations. May be repeated for credit as
topics vary.
3810. International Relations. 3 hours.
Analytical survey of current world politics. Satisfies
the Cross-cultural, Diversity and Global Studies requirement
of the University Core Curriculum.
3910. Practicum. 1-3 hours. Field practicum
offered as special problems or organized course. Prerequisite(s):
consent of department and chair; PSCI 3110 for national
or state legislative internships.
4020. Urban Politics. 3 hours. The city
in social order; political machinery of central city and
suburbs; types of conflicts, policies, leadership and
groups; metropolitan government.
4100. Political Parties. 3 hours. Development,
nature, problems, organization, operation and functions.
4120. Public Opinion and Participation.
3 hours. Shaping factors, communication techniques, public
opinion, governmental action and democracy.
4130. American Intergovernmental Relations.
3 hours. Federal system; constitutional and theoretical
bases of federalism; national/state/local government conflict
and cooperation; regional arrangements; political centralization;
impact upon American traditions; future prospects. (Same
as PADM 4130.)
4140. The Presidency. 3 hours. Development
of power, influence and limitations of the chief executive;
selection, office, changing role and problems of control.
4200-4210. Constitutional Government and Law
in the United States. 3 hours each. Constitution
of the United States, work of the Supreme Court, and effects
of decisions on national and state government.
4200. Constitutional Law: Discrimination
and the Powers of the Government. Decisions of the United
States Supreme Court; scope of legislative, executive
and judicial power; presidential power in war and foreign
affairs; clash of national and state power; economic liberties
and property rights; racial and gender discrimination.
4210. Constitutional Law: Rights and
Liberties. Decisions of the United States Supreme Court;
freedom of religion, speech and press; rights of criminal
defendants; right to privacy.
4220. Jurisprudence. 3 hours. Law in
the modern state, meaning and objects, sources and growth,
and conceptions of rights and justice. Prerequisite(s):
3 hours in public law.
4320. American Political Theory. 3 hours.
American political thought since Colonial beginnings.
4330. Topics in Political Theory. 3
hours. This course addresses either the work of selected
theorists, such as Plato, Thucydides, Machiavelli, Locke
or Marx, or themes, such as morality and politics, liberalism
and authoritarianism. May be repeated for credit as topics
vary.
4450. Public Policy Analysis. 3 hours.
Policy making, impact of public policy and factors that
place specific problems on the public agenda. (Same as
PADM 4450.)
4490. Topics in Public Policy. 3 hours.
Analysis of the making, implementation and evaluation
of major policy issues in the United States. Representative
topics include aging, defense, civil rights, economic
growth, education, environment, health care and poverty.
May be repeated for credit as topics vary. Prerequisite(s):
PSCI 1040, PSCI 1050 and PSCI 2300 or its equivalent.
4520. International Human Rights. 3
hours. Consideration of the concept and role of human
rights in international affairs. Satisfies the Cross-cultural,
Diversity and Global Studies requirement of the University
Core Curriculum.
4630. The Military in Politics. 3 hours.
Involvement of the world’s military forces in domestic
politics, government and policy making, especially in
the non-Western nations of Africa, Asia, Latin America
and the Middle East. Topics include civil-military relations,
military forces as interest groups, military intervention
and the coup d’etat, and military performance in
government.
4640. Revolution and Political Violence.
3 hours. Causes and consequences of revolution and other
forms of political violence in nations.
4650. Comparative Public Policy. 3 hours.
Public policy and policy making in Westernized democratic
nations. Analysis and evaluation of public policies. Introduction
to cross-national policy study techniqsues.
4660. Democracy and Democratization.
3 hours. Explores democracy’s nature, causes of
democratization, the spread of democracy in the world,
and problems of consolidation of democracy. Satisfies
the Cross-cultural, Diversity and Global Studies requirement
of the University Core Curriculum.
4700. Topics in Comparative Politics.
3 hours. Major areas of research and controversy in the
politics of contemporary nations. Representative topics
include political socialization, peasant movements, political
recruitment and judicial politics. May be repeated for
credit as topics vary.
4710. Middle East Politics: Critical Issues.
3 hours. Overview of Middle Eastern regional politics.
Attention is given to such issues as legitimacy, authority,
identity, military, democracy and religious fundamentalism.
Satisfies the Cross-cultural, Diversity and Global Studies
requirement of the University Core Curriculum.
4720. Ethnicity in World Politics. 3
hours. Consideration of the concepts of ethnicity and
nationalism as divisive elements in world affairs. Satisfies
the Cross-cultural, Diversity and Global Studies requirement
of the University Core Curriculum.
4800. The Politics of International Organization.
3 hours. The formation of policy at the international
level on questions of military security, the environment,
the international economy, economic development through
the United Nations and related agencies, and the place
of the multinational corporation in world affairs.
4810. International Law. 3 hours. Theoretical
and political foundations of the law among nations; formation,
change, application and enforcement of law; modern trends.
Prerequisite(s): PSCI 3200 or 3810, or consent of instructor.
4820. Contemporary International Problems.
3 hours. Major contemporary problems and conflicts confronting
the international system. Prerequisite(s): consent of
instructor. May be repeated for credit as topics vary.
4821. International Conflict. 3 hours.
Examines the forces that promote conflict and peace within
the international system, including change over time.
Students survey the scholarly literature on war to learn
what leading research can explain about international
conflict.
4822. International Conflict Management.
3 hours. Examination of the idea of international conflict
management, focusing on the forms it can take and the
conditions under which it can be successful.
4823. International Criminal Tribunals and War
Crimes. 3 hours. Examines international war crimes,
such as Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, including the
causes and consequences of such conflicts. Efforts to
establish institutions of international justice, including
the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda. Students
explore international legal issues associated with such
courts.
4824. Islam, Democracy and Human Rights.
3 hours. Surveys Islamic political thought in order to
understand basic Islamic concepts and doctrines, such
as role of religion in politics, rights and duties of
the individual and community, and the nature of government.
Course includes an examination of 19th- and 20th-century
liberal and conservative Islamic thinkers and their efforts
to reinterpret Islam to meet the challenges of modernization.
Study of contemporary debates within Islam, such as democracy
and human rights.
4825. Conflict and Peacemaking in the Middle
East. 3 hours. Examines conflict in the Middle
East at regional, national and sub-national levels from
several ideological perspectives. Students examine specific
conflicts and efforts to secure peace in the region.
4830. American Foreign Policy. 3 hours.
Principles and bases on which American foreign policy
rests; machinery and personnel for policy formulation.
4840. Major Problems of American Foreign Policy.
3 hours. Recent policies, decision making, implementation
and coordination.
4850. Critical Issues in World Politics.
3 hours. Examination of major issues in world politics,
including potential for war, religious fundamentalism,
morality, weapons of mass destruction, and diminishing
resources. Satisfies the Cross-cultural, Diversity and
Global Studies requirement of the University Core Curriculum.
4860. International Political Economy.
3 hours. A study of the politics of economic issues in
international affairs, including the creation, maintenance
and decay of international cooperation in trade; monetary
and financial relations among Western countries; the roles
of state and non-state participants; conflict and cooperation
in East-West and North-South international economic relations;
and an examination of the imperialist and world systems
approaches to international affairs.
4900-4910. Special Problems. 1-3 hours
each.
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