| 
 Introductory
Courses:
 100-
American
Governement
and
Politics:

100-

200-

300-

400-
Political
Theory:

100-

200-
 300-
Comparative
Politics:

100-

200-

300-
International
Politics:

100-

200-

300-
Other
Programs:

Special
Program

Independent
Study

Honors

Internship
|

COURSE
DESCRIPTION
Catalog
Course Listing
Special
Topic Courses Spring 2007
Special
Topic Courses Fall 2006
Fall 2008 Special Topics to be Posted
Spring
2007 Course Schedule
Summer
2005 Course Schedule
Fall 2008 Schedule
COURSE
LISTINGS
Students
matriculated fall 2001 or later must take 3 courses with a significant
writing component as part of the General Education Requirement at
Hunter College. At least 1 of these courses must be from GER Stage
3. Political science courses that meet the writing requirement (as
of spring 2002) have a “W” designation below. All 200-
or 300-level political science courses satisfy the Focused Exposure/Stage
3, Group B requirement. Additional courses will be approved to meet
the writing requirement in the future. Check with the department
for an up-to-date list of “W”-designated courses.
Introductory
Courses:
Each of the following five introductory courses is intended to acquaint
the student with a particular segment of political science. Each
will fulfill 3 credits of the Broad Exposure/Stage 2, Group B requirement
or the Distribution Requirement in the social sciences, although
only one of these courses may be used for that purpose.
POLSC 110(W) American Government:
A Historical Introduction 3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/1/C or GER/2/B. Overview
of the American political system from a historical perspective,
with emphasis on the Constitution and its enduring influence, development
of party systems and citizen participation, and evolving role of
Congress, presidency, and courts. Not open to students who have
taken POLSC 111.
POLSC 111(W) Introduction to American Government and Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. President, Congress, Supreme Court, Constitution,
politics, parties, pressure groups. Not open to students who have
taken POLSC 110.
POLSC 112(W) Introduction to Political Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Selected writings of the great polit.ical
thinkers. Recurrent problems of politics from Plato to the present.
POLSC 115(W) Introduction to International Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Diplomacy, power, war, peace, terrorism,
nationalism, imperialism, the UN, structures and processes of world
politics.
POLSC 117(W) Introduction to Comparative Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Comparative analysis of liberal democracies,
one-party states, and authoritarian regimes; presentation and application
of basic concepts and theories of comparative political analysis.
[back to top]
American
Government and Politics:
POLSC 110(W) American Government:
A Historical Introduction 3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/1/C or GER/2/B. Overview
of the American political system from a historical perspective,
with emphasis on the Constitution and its enduring influence, development
of party systems and citizen participation, and evolving role of
Congress, presidency, and courts. Not open to students who have
taken POLSC 111.
POLSC 111(W) Introduction to American Government and Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. President, Congress, Supreme Court, Constitution,
politics, parties, pressure groups. Not open to students who have
taken POLSC 110.
POLSC 211(W) State Government
and Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Comparative analysis of state governments.
Power and role of governors, state legislatures, parties, lobbies.
POLSC 212(W) Urban Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Politics in New York City and other
urban areas. Decentralization, suburbanization, race, ethnicity,
reform.
POLSC 213 Political Parties and Elections:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Organization campaigns, nominations, voting
behavior, issues, finances, reforms.
POLSC 214(W) Political Parties and Interest Groups:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Theories and analysis of two key
institutions that link citizens and policy makers
in the United States, in both historical and contemporary perspective.
POLSC 215(W) Public Opinion and Political Participation:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. What American people think about politics
and how they express it, from polls to elections to demonstrations.
POLSC 217 Contemporary Issues in American Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Selected topics in American politics and government.
POLSC 218(W) Women and Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/C. Constitutional and legal position
of women, ERA, affirmative action, marriage,
divorce, property, feminist causes.
POLSC 219(W) Women and the Law:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/C. Overview of how local, state,
and federal laws treat people on the basis of sex.
POLSC 220(W) Globalization and Opposition Movements:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; The environmental, social and political effects of
economic globalization in less industrialized and
highly industrialized countries; reformist and radical
critiques and neoliberal defenses; causes and
consequences of opposition movements.
POLSC
230(W) The American Presidency:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Selection, election, role, functions,
and powers of the President.
POLSC 235(W) The American Congress:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Legislation and policy-making process.
Congressional organization, functions and behavior. Lobbies, parties,
leaders.
POLSC 238 The American Legal System:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Civil and criminal law, common law
and equity, substantive and procedural law. Emphasis on federal
and New York law.
POLSC 240(W) The American Judiciary:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. The Supreme Court and other federal courts
as part of policy-making process in American government.
POLSC 241( W) Managing American Government:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Organizing and controlling governmental agencies,
with emphasis on efficiency and equity,
problems and reforms.
POLSC 244(W) Energy and Environmental Politics and Public
Policy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Examination of political processes and public
policies shaping energy production and consumption in the U.S. with
comparative reference to other countries. Emphasis on political,
economic, social, environmental, and foreign policy aspects.
POLSC 274(W) American Foreign Policy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Personalities and processes in making, administering,
and controlling our foreign policy.
POLSC 301(W) American Political
Thought:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Examination of ideas that have shaped
American politics from the Revolution to the present, including
Federalists and Anti-Federalists, Progressivism and responses to
industrialization, and recent debates over the welfare state, political
inclusion, and democracy.
POLSC 317 Contemporary Issues in American Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Selected topics in American politics
and government.
POLSC 320(W) Ethnic Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; PD/B; GER/3/B. Ethnicity in local and national politics.
Major groups, how they affect government, what government does for
them.
POLSC 321(W) American Political Economy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Critical analysis of the distribution of power
between the state and the private sector.
Theories about the government-business relationship are tested through
a series of case studies.
POLSC
340(W) Constitutional Law:
Organizing the Government 3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 110
or 111 or 238. Constitutional problems and Supreme Court decisions.
Federalism, judicial review, separation of powers, foreign policy.
POLSC
341(W) Constitutional Law:
Civil Rights 3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 110 or 111 or 238;
GER/3/B. Constitutional problems and Supreme Court decisions regarding
race and sex discrimination.
POLSC
342(W) Constitutional Law:
The
First Amendment 3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 110 or 111 or
238. Constitutional problems and Supreme Court decisions regarding
freedom of speech, press (media), religion, and assembly.
POLSC
343(W) Criminal Law:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 110 or 111 or 238.
Constitutional problems and judicial decisions regarding search
and seizure, right to counsel, self-incrimination.
POLSC
348(W) Public Administration and Public Policy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Analysis of problems in policy-making and
administration, focusing on motivations, ethics, authority.
POLSC
411, 412 Seminar/Internship in New York Government:
4 hrs, 4 cr each sem. Prereq: perm dept. Practical experience in
government and politics. Weekly seminars, monthly university-wide
meetings.
POLSC
482 Seminar in Political Behavior:
3 hrs, 3 cr. Prereq: perm instr. or dept. Advanced seminar in public
opinion, voting, mass politics. Major paper required.
[back to top]
Political
Theory:
POLSC
112(W) Introduction to Political Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Selected writings of the great political thinkers.
Recurrent problems of politics from Plato to the present.
POLSC
201(W) Ancient to Early Modern Political Thought:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. The study of selected writers from the
ancient Greeks to the Renaissance (e.g., Plato to Machiavelli),
focusing on the political dimensions of such ideas as rationality,
virtue, community, human nature, and historical change.
POLSC
202(W) Modern Political Thought (1600-1900):
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; *PD/D. The study of selected political writers
(e.g., Hobbes to Nietzsche), with special emphasis given to the
nature of, and problems with, liberty, equality, and justice in
modern societies and states.
POLSC
203(W) Political Thought Since 1900:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; *PD/D. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120.
Exploration of concepts and thinkers in political theory since 1900.
Topics will include such traditional issues of political theory
as the nature and scope of political regimes, justice, equality,
and changing concepts of human nature.
POLSC
204 Contemporary Issues in Political Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Topics vary each semester. They
have included democracy in America, totalitarianism, liberty, and
authority.
POLSC
206(W) Research Design in Political Science:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: passing College proficiency examination
in math or perm instr. Uses Social Science Data Lab. Offered fall.
Public opinion surveys, content analysis, legislative roll-call
analysis, census data, election returns. Introduction to statistics.
POLSC
207(W) Data Analysis in Political Science:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 206 or perm instr. Uses Social
Science Data Lab. Offered spring. Computer applications and statistical
analysis and political science. Students write a quantitative term
paper.
POLSC
209(W) Women and Gender in Western Political Thought:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/C or D. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120 or equivalent.
Examines history of political thought from the perspective of gender
relations and the treatment of women.
POLSC
301(W) American Political Thought:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Examination of ideas that have
shaped American politics from the Revolution to the
present, including Federalists and Anti-Federalists, Progressivism
and responses to industrialization, and recent debates over the
welfare state, political inclusion, and democracy.
POLSC
303(W) Democracy and Dictatorship:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Communism, fascism, democracy. Major political
doctrines of the 20th century in theory and practice.
POLSC
304 Contemporary Issues in Political Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. *Prereq: Any course in the Political Theory
subfield or perm instr. Selected topics in political theory.
POLSC
305(W) Democratic Theory:
3 hrs. 3 cr; GER/3/B. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120 and one course in
political theory or perm dept. A critical survey of different conceptions
of democracy: issues include democracy as a political order, democracy
and “non-political” forms of life (e.g., business, family,
religion), toleration, political representation, democracy and justice.
POLSC
306(W) Approaches to Political Science:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Major organizing concepts in the study of
political science.
POLSC
307(W) Theory of Revolution:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. A theoretical exploration of the meaning of revolution.
POLSC
309(W) Feminist Political Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/C. Readings in feminist ideas, both historical
and contemporary, on issues of power, justice, and equality. The
course will emphasize different perspectives, including those of
liberal, radical, postmodernist, women of color, third world, and
“global” feminists.
POLSC
311(W) Utopian Theory:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: ENGL 120 and one course in political
theory or perm dept. Political theorists often imagine ideal worlds,
both to explore ideals and to criticize political realities. This
course will explore utopias and dystopias as theories that explore
political possibilities and challenge existing realities.
POLSC
316(W) Political Theory of Human Rights:
3
hrs, 3 crs; GER/3/B. Prereq: ENGL 120 or equivalent; one previous
course in political theory or perm instr; GER/3/B. A critical analysis
of the intersection of academic and practical discourse of human
rights with the central concerns of political theory, particularly
as it engages relationships between ethics and power as well as
theory and practice.
[back to top]
Comparative
Politics
POLSC
117(W) Introduction to Comparative Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Comparative analysis of liberal
democracies, one-party states, and authoritarian regimes’
presentation and application of basic concepts and theories of comparative
political analysis.
POLSC
251(W) Politics of Africa, Asia, and Latin America:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120 or equiv. An examination
of the nature of governance and politics in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. Through an in-depth study of several countries, topics
and concepts, such as political culture, modernization, development,
dependency, democracy, political leadership, and the processes of
policy making, are explored.
POLSC
252(W) Government and Politics in the Caribbean:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A.Colonial heritage and American
presence. Political institutions, cultural diversity, and economic
dependency.
POLSC
253(W) Government and Politics in Latin America:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Ideology, revolution, institutions,
class structure, distribution of wealth and power, political and
economic development.
POLSC
254(W) Government and Politics in Western Europe:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. Theory, practice, institutions,
and problems of noncommunist European nations (Britain, France,
Germany, etc.).
POLSC
255(W) Government and Politics of Japan and Korea:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Political, social, and economic
institutions of Japan and Korea; their domestic politics and relations
with the world.
POLSC
256(W) Government and Politics in South and Southeast Asia:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Political, economic, and social
institutions of India, Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, etc.
POLSC
257(W) Government and Politics of China:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Chinese politics, institutions,
and foreign policy.
POLSC
260(W) African Politics through African Films:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. An examination of contemporary
African politics using various social science theories, films, and
documentaries made by African filmmakers.
POLSC
262(W) Government and Politics in Central America:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Political institutions, ideology, class
and ethnic structure, economic development, distribution of wealth
and power, foreign influences, and revolutionary and evolutionary
roads to modernization.
POLSC
263(W) Government and Politics in the Middle East:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Introduction to Islamic societies
and their politics with particular attention to cultures of region.
POLSC
264(W) Government and Politics of Israel:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Historic evolution of the Jewish
state and its political system, social issues, and foreign policy.
POLSC
265(W) Government and Politics in Eastern Europe:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B;PD/D. Political, social, and economic
institutions of individual Eastern Central European nations and
their post-communist transitions.
POLSC
267(W) The Politics of Southern Africa:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Political, economic, and social
institutions in Zimbabwe, Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania, South Africa,
etc.
POLSC
269(W) Governments and Politics of Northern Africa:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Political, economic, and social institutions
in Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, Libya, etc.
POLSC
270(W) Black Revolution in Africa:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Examination of varieties of revolution and
socialism in Africa in post-independence era.
POLSC
272(W) Contemporary Issues in Comparative Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 113 or 114 or 117 or perm dept.
Selected topics in comparative politics. Past topics included comparative
communism, Mideast foreign policy.
POLSC
279(W) Revolutionary Mass Movements: Communism, Fascism, Anarchism:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Comparative study of radical social
movements in 20th century, including communist, fascist, and anarchist
movements.
POLSC
310(W) Comparative Legal Systems:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. *Prereq: POLSC 111, 238 or 340 or
341 or 343 or 375 orany course in the Comparative Politics subfield,
or perm instr. Comparative study of major legal traditions of the
modern world, including Common Law, Civil Law, Soviet, Islamic,
Chinese, tribal, and hybrid systems.
POLSC
315(W) Social and Economic Policies in Western Europe and the United
States:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120 and any course
in comparative politics; or perm instr. Evolution of social and
economic policies from the 19th century to the present. Policies
are analyzed in
light of tensions between democracy and capitalism.
POLSC
351(W) Government and Politics of Russia and the Post-Soviet States:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Post-Soviet politics, institutions,
social forces, economic transformations, and regions. *Pending Hunter
College Senate approval.
POLSC
352(W) State and Society in Africa:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/A. Pre- or coreq: ENGL 120 or equiv. An
examination of the nature of the relationship between the African
state and civil society in the post-independence period and how
this relationship influences governance and democracy.
POLSC
372 Contemporary Issues in Comparative Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. *Prereq: any course in the Comparative Politics
subfield or perm instr. Selected topics in comparative politics.
POLSC
378(W) Russian National Interest: Past and Present:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. Prereq: ENGL 120 or equiv,
POLSC 115 or POLSC 117 or perm instr. In a contemporary, historical,
and comparative context, this course will explore the factors influencing
debates on and definitions of Russia’s national interests,
the strategies for promoting those interests, and the implications
for Russia and the international system.
[back to top]
International
Politics
POLSC
115 Introduction to International Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/2/B. Diplomacy, power, war, peace, terrorism,
nationalism, imperialism, the UN, structures and processes of world
politics.
POLSC 271(W) International Politics in the
Americas:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Imperialism and dependency in Latin
America. U.S. public and private agencies, international organizations.
POLSC
273 Contemporary Issues in International Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Special issues in international politics.
Past topics included the international law of energy, world water
resources, war.
POLSC
274(W) American Foreign Policy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Personalities and processes in making,
administering, and controlling our foreign policy. Crises and dilemmas.
POLSC
275(W) Politics of the Global Economy
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B.
Highlighting the interaction of politics and economics across
national borders, this course examines the theories, methods and
substantive issues in the international political economy subfield,
including the politics of trade, development, varieties of capitalism,
globalization, and global commons issues. Not open to students who
have
taken POLSC 376.
POLSC
276(W) International Relations of the Third World:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Analysis of the role played by Third
World states in international arena, examining relations of developing
nations with advanced industrialized states, socialist states, and
other developing nations.
POLSC
278(W) International Organizations:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 115 or perm instr.
Powers, functions, and effectiveness of international institutions;
emphasis on United Nations and regional organizations.
POLSC 280(W) Women, War, and Peace:
3 hrs, 3 cr; ; GER/3/B; PD/C. The course examinesthe roles
that women have played as subjects and objects in war and
peace.
POLSC
281(W) Drugs, Politics, and Public Policy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Examination of public policies addressing
drug use and abuse in the United States and other countries with
emphasis on political and cultural determinants, economic and market
factors, constitutional implications, and United States foreign
policy.
POLSC
282(W) International Security:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: ENGL 120 or equivalent. An introduction
to basic concepts and problems in the area of international security,
this course will explore explanations for some of the central causes
of security/insecurity and peace/war, as well as examine select
contemporary security issues.
POLSC 373 Contemporary Issues in International
Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 115 or perm instr.
Selected topics in international politics.
POLSC
374(W) International Human Rights:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: ENGL 120 or equivalent. An
examination of the origins, substance, and processes of human rights
in international relations.
POLSC
375(W) International Law:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Case studies on nature, sources,
practices, and efficacy of international law, principles, and rules.
POLSC
376(W) International Political Economy:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 115 or 117 or 243 or
271 or perm instr. Critical issues facing international system,
such as global inequality, new international economic order, role
of multinational corporations, and neo-colonialism.
POLSC
377(W) Theories of International Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 115 or equivalent.
An examination of the central concepts and issues in international
politics that underpin the main theoretical debates in the field.
POLSC
378(W) Russian National Interest: Past and Present:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. Prereq: ENGL 120 or equiv,
POLSC 115 or POLSC 117 or perm instr. In a contemporary, historical,
and comparative context, this course will explore the factors influencing
debates on and definitions of Russia’s national interests,
the strategies for promoting those interests, and the implications
for Russia and the international system.
POLSC
380(W) European Security:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B; PD/D. Prereq: POLSC 115 or 273.87
or 282 or perm dept. Examination of the sources of war and peace,
instability and stability, and insecurity and security in Europe,
using social science theories and historical case studies.
POLSC
381(W) East Asia in World Politics:
3 hrs, 3 cr; GER/3/B. Prereq: POLSC 115 or perm dept and
ENGL 120; PD/A. An examination of sources of stability and instability
in East Asia, using social science theories and historical background.
Special
Programs
POLSC
411, 412 Seminar/Internship in New York City Government:
2 sems, 4 hrs, 4 cr each sem. Prereq: perm dept. POLSC
411 offered fall, 412 offered spring. Practical experience in city
government and politics. Weekly Seminars, monthly university-wide
meetings.
POLSC
480 Seminar in Selected Problems of Political Science:
3 hrs, 3 cr. Prereq: perm dept, Jr/Sr only. Advanced seminar
on selected topics.
POLSC
482 Seminar in Political Behavior:
3 hrs, 3 cr. Prereq: perm instr. Advanced seminar in public
opinion, voting, mass politics. Major paper required.
POLSC
486 Senior Colloquium:
3 hrs, 3 cr. Prereq: perm dept. Advanced seminar. Major
project and/or paper required.
Independent
Study 1-3
cr
Prereq:
At least one course in the appropriate subfield and perm dept. Students
may take independent study only with full-time members of the department.
As a general rule, the students should have taken a prior course
with this instructor. Departmental permission will not be granted
without explicit approval by the instructor.
POLSC
490.11-13 Independent Study in American Government and Politics
POLSC
490.21-23 Independent Study in Political Theory
POLSC
490.31-33 Independent Study in Comparative Politics
POLSC
490.41-43 Independent Study in International Politics
Honors
1-3 cr
Prereq:
at least one course in the appropriate subfield and perm dept. Students
may take independent study honors projects only with full-time members
of the department. As a general rule, the students should have taken
a prior course with this instructor. Departmental permission will
not be granted without explicit approval by the instructor.
POLSC
492.11-13 Independent Study in American Government and Politics—Honors
POLSC
492.21-23 Independent Study in Political Theory—Honors
POLSC
492.31-33 Independent Study in Comparative Politics—Honors
POLSC
492.41-43 Independent Study in International Politics—Honors
Internship
1-6 cr
Prereq:
at least one course in the appropriate subfield and perm dept. Students
may take independent study internships only under the supervision
of full-time members of the department. As a general rule, the students
should have taken a prior course with this instructor. Departmental
permission will not be granted without explicit approval by the
instructor.
POLSC
498.11-16 Internship in American Government and Politics
POLSC
498.21-26 Internship in Political Theory
POLSC
498.31-36 Internship in Comparative Politics
POLSC
498.41-46 Internship in International Politics
Students
may take an independent study, an honors course, and/or an internship
more than once. No more than 6 credits of internship may be applied
to the major in political science.
[back to top]

|