![]() Class Attributes: DC SCE SE / CM CT IL KI SR.Are you passionate about moral issues, but unsure about how to navigate controversies surrounding them? Learn how to support your positions with clear and persuasive arguments in the course that aims to help students do just that by critically examining arguments on both sides of heated contemporary moral debates.This course provides critical investigations of how race, ethnicity, class, sex, religion, ideology, disability, and other forms of identity, difference, and exclusion influence and intersect with LGBTQ social-justice activism. Learn about past and present influences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people in social justice activism.Students will be introduced to feminist media analysis methods and a range of popular media such as fiction, non-fiction and film. This course looks at ways in which aspects of popular culture function as both a source of anti-feminism and a site of feminist work toward social change. Pop culture can reinforce and transform social norms.Class Attributes: DC DEI SE / CM CT KI SR.Students will learn analytical methods from Film Studies, Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and Critical Race Studies, and apply them to both Hollywood movies and films from around the world. This course encourages students to think about how sexual and racial diversity, equity and inclusion affect filmmaking and how films, in turn, shape society's attitudes and behaviors around sexual and racial diversity, equity and inclusion.Course Attributes: DC SCE SS / CT KI SR.Explore new perspectives of human sexuality in this course that will deepen students' academic understanding of psychological, social, cultural and scientific issues related to sexuality and equip them with interdisciplinary concepts and methodologies for analyzing human sexuality. Sexuality fundamentally affects our lives at different levels and is a unique lived experience for each and every person.Class Attributes: SCE SE SS / CM CT IL KI SR.It is open to political science or international affairs majors, as well as other majors seeking to improve their understanding of international cooperation. This course will address issues within international cooperation such as its origins, the development of international norms, laws and ethics, domestic and transnational sources of cooperation, and the role of regimes and institutions in fostering cooperation. ![]() Establish understandings of key concepts, social and cultural systems and theories that examine international cooperation and how it is reproduced over time.POL 2087: Cooperation in International Relations.Students will also learn how to use data to assess health mobilization efforts in both national and state contexts. Gain a basic understanding of American institutions involved in the formation of health policies and their roles in the policy-making process. Curious about how politics impact health policies in America? This course will provide an overview of domestic health policies and the politics that contribute to the development of health and policy outcomes.POL 3023: Health Politics & Policy in the U.S.Using academic concepts, structures, theories and processes to explore issues like civil rights and liberties, students will trace the historical development of the American political system and its institutions. Students taking this course will examine American political ideology and learn about the dynamics of the American political system, including public opinion, voting behavior, the influence of political parties and public policy.POL 1010: Introduction to American Politics.How can biodiversity mitigate the impacts of human-caused climate change? Learn how by taking this course that explores biodiversity conservation and introduces students to theories and practical methods of conservation biogeography. ![]()
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